leptine
Leptine, or leptin in English, is a hormone produced predominantly by white adipose tissue. In humans the LEP gene encodes leptin, while the ob gene was identified in mice. Circulating leptin levels rise with increasing fat mass and fall with weight loss, making it a central signal of energy stores to the brain.
Leptin acts mainly in the hypothalamus by binding to leptin receptors (LepR), especially the long form LepRb.
Regulation: leptin production reflects adiposity and is modulated by insulin, glucocorticoids, and inflammatory signals. Leptin must
Clinical aspects: congenital leptin deficiency caused by LEP mutations leads to severe early-onset obesity and endocrine
Discovery: leptin was identified in 1994 by Friedman and colleagues, transforming understanding of energy homeostasis.