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American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol. 70, No. 3, 321-330, September 1999
© 1999 American Society for Clinical Nutrition


Original Research Communications

Effect of prolonged moderate and severe energy restriction and refeeding on plasma leptin concentrations in obese women1,2,3

Brent E Wisse, L Arthur Campfield, Errol B Marliss, José A Morais, Renata Tenenbaum and Réjeanne Gougeon

1 From the McGill Nutrition and Food Science Centre, Royal Victoria Hospital, Montréal, Canada, and Hoffmann-La Roche, Inc, Nutley, NJ.

Background: Plasma leptin in humans is subject to both long- and short-term regulation; it correlates with indexes of body fat that can only change slowly. However, short-term fasting causes large and rapid decreases.

Objective: We tested the interactions between energy intake and fat loss on plasma leptin during prolonged moderate and severe energy restriction, with a view to understanding mechanisms of control.

Design: Postabsorptive leptin was measured with an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay specific for the human peptide in 21 obese women aged 41 ± 3 y (weight: 102 ± 4 kg; 48 ± 1% body fat) after 1 wk of a weight-maintaining diet and then weekly for 4 wk during a total fast (group 1); a 1.9-MJ/d all-protein, very-low-energy diet (VLED) (group 2); or a low-energy, balanced-deficit diet (BDD) providing 50% of maintenance energy (group 3). In groups 1 and 2, leptin was also measured after 1 wk of refeeding with a diet equivalent to the BDD.

Results: Mean leptin decreased markedly by up to 66% (P < 0.001) at week 1 of energy restriction and then gradually thereafter. The change in leptin per kilogram fat mass correlated with that in glucose concentrations [r = 0.538 (P = 0.012) at week 1 and r = 0.447 (P = 0.042) at week 4] but not with that in fat mass. During refeeding postfasting, leptin increased (P = 0.008), despite an ongoing loss of fat mass and correlated positively with changes in resting energy expenditure. At times with comparable cumulative energy restriction and fat loss between diets, the percentage change in leptin paralleled that in glucose.

Conclusions: In obesity, changes in energy intake over days to weeks are a primary modulator of plasma leptin concentrations that are related to the change in glycemia and are able to override the regulatory influence of fat mass.

Key Words: OB gene • obesity • leptin • energy restriction • refeeding • fasting • ketones • lipolysis • resting energy expenditure • women




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