Weight-Reducing Effects of the Plasma Protein Encoded by the <i>obese</i> Gene

Jeffrey L. Halaas(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), K.S. Gajiwala(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Margherita Maffei(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Steven L. Cohen(Rockefeller University), Brian T. Chait(Rockefeller University), Daniel Rabinowitz(Columbia University), Roger L. Lallone(Brightwood College), S.K. Burley(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Jeffrey M. Friedman(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
Science
July 28, 1995
Cited by 4,453

Abstract

The gene product of the ob locus is important in the regulation of body weight. The ob product was shown to be present as a 16-kilodalton protein in mouse and human plasma but was undetectable in plasma from C57BL/6J ob/ob mice. Plasma levels of this protein were increased in diabetic (db) mice, a mutant thought to be resistant to the effects of ob. Daily intraperitoneal injections of either mouse or human recombinant OB protein reduced the body weight of ob/ob mice by 30 percent after 2 weeks of treatment with no apparent toxicity but had no effect on db/db mice. The protein reduced food intake and increased energy expenditure in ob/ob mice. Injections of wild-type mice twice daily with the mouse protein resulted in a sustained 12 percent weight loss, decreased food intake, and a reduction of body fat from 12.2 to 0.7 percent. These data suggest that the OB protein serves an endocrine function to regulate body fat stores.


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