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a Department of Physiology, Morehouse School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia 30310
b Yerkes Regional Primate Research Center, Atlanta, Georgia 30329
c Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Texas Tech University Health Science Center, Amarillo, Texas 79106
The objective of this study was to examine longitudinal changes in serum leptin concentrations during development and to correlate those changes with sexual development in male rhesus monkeys housed under natural environmental conditions. Blood samples were drawn from 8 control animals approximately every other month from 10 to 30 mo of age and thereafter monthly through 80 mo of age. Leptin levels declined through the juvenile period until the onset of puberty and were negatively correlated with body weight. Seven of the eight animals became sexually mature during the breeding season of their fourth year of life. Puberty was delayed in the other animal until the subsequent breeding season. There were no significant fluctuations in leptin levels prior to or in association with the pubertal rise in LH and testosterone (T) secretion. During the peripubertal period, levels of leptin varied between 2 and 3 ng/ml. The animal that exhibited delayed puberty had the lowest body weight and highest leptin levels during this period. With the achievement of sexual maturity, leptin levels varied seasonally, with peak levels in the late winter (JanMar) and a nadir in the late summer (AugSept). A late winter rise in leptin was also evident in most of the animals during Years 2 and 3, but not during Year 4. In the fall of Years 5 and 6, the seasonal rise in leptin concentrations lagged 34 mo behind the seasonal increase in LH and T. In the fall of Year 5, but not thereafter, leptin levels were positively related to percent body fat and negatively correlated with lean body mass. The data do not support the hypothesis that increasing leptin concentrations trigger the onset of puberty in the male rhesus monkey. During the juvenile period and after sexual maturation, but not during the peripubertal period, leptin secretion varied with season in the animals; but the environmental factors that cue or drive this rhythm remain to be determined.
1 Support was provided by NIH grants HD26423, RR03034, and RR00165.
2 Correspondence: David R. Mann, Department of Physiology, Morehouse School of Medicine, 720 Westview Drive SW, Atlanta, GA 30310-1495. FAX: 404 752 1056; mann{at}msm.edu
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