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AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: The adipose tissue-derived hormone leptin plays an important role in the maintenance of body weight and glucose homeostasis. Leptin mediates its effects by interaction with leptin receptors (LepRb), which are highly expressed in the hypothalamus and other brain centres, and at lower levels in the periphery. Previous studies have used relatively promiscuous or inefficient Cre deleter strains, respectively, to explore the roles of LepR in pancreatic beta and alpha cells. Here, we use two newly-developed Cre lines to explore the role of leptin signalling in insulin and proglucagon-expressing cells. METHODS: Leptin receptor expression was measured in isolated mouse islets and highly-purified islet cells by RNASeq and quantitative RT-PCR. Mice lacking leptin signalling in pancreatic beta, or in alpha and other proglucagon-expressing cells, were generated using Ins1Cre- or iGluCre-mediated recombination respectively of flox'd leptin receptor alleles. In vivo glucose homeostasis, changes in body weight, pancreatic histology and hormone secretion from isolated islets were assessed using standard techniques. RESULTS: Leptin receptor mRNA levels were at or below the level of detection in wild-type adult mouse isolated islets and purified cells, and leptin signalling to Stat3 phosphorylation was undetectable. Whereas male mice further deleted for leptin receptors in beta cells exhibited no abnormalities in glucose tolerance up to 16 weeks of age, females transiently displayed improved glucose tolerance at 8 weeks (11.2 +/- 3.2% decrease in area under curve; p < 0.05), and improved (39.0 +/- 13.0%, P < 0.05) glucose-stimulated insulin secretion in vitro. No differences were seen between genotypes in body weight, fasting glucose or beta/alpha cell ratio. Deletion of LepR from alpha-cells, a minority of beta cells, and a subset of proglucagon-expressing cells in the brain, exerted no effects on body weight, glucose or insulin tolerance, nor on pancreatic hormone secretion assessed in vivo and in vitro. CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION: The use here of a highly selective Cre recombinase indicates that leptin signalling plays a relatively minor, age- and sex-dependent role in the control of beta cell function in the mouse. No in vivo role for leptin receptors on alpha cells, nor in other proglucagon-expressing cells, was detected in this study.

Original publication

DOI

10.1016/j.molmet.2015.06.007

Type

Journal article

Journal

Mol Metab

Publication Date

2015

Volume

4

Pages

619 - 630

Keywords

AUC, area under the curve Diabetes Glp-1 GTT, ITT, glucose and insulin tolerance test, respectively Glucagon IP, intraperitoneal Insulin KATP, ATP-sensitive K+ channel L-cell Leptin NTS, nucleus tractus solitarius [Ca2+]i, intracellular free Ca2+ concentration alpha cell beta cell