0021-972X/99/$03.00/0
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism
Copyright © 1999 by The Endocrine Society
Vol. 84, No. 3
Printed in U.S.A.
Leptin Antagonizes the Insulin-Like Growth Factor-I
Augmentation of Steroidogenesis in Granulosa and
Theca Cells of the Human Ovary*
SANJAY K. AGARWAL, KLARA VOGEL, STACY R. WEITSMAN,
DENIS A. MAGOFFIN
AND
ABSTRACT
There is increasing evidence that leptin is a physiological link
between obesity and infertility. Although leptin receptors have been
demonstrated in human ovaries, there is no information regarding the
effects of leptin on cells from developing ovarian follicles. To test the
direct effects of leptin on human ovarian cells, granulosa cells (GC)
and theca cells were isolated from the ovaries of regularly cycling
women. Serum was obtained at the time of surgery, and follicular fluid
was aspirated from the follicles before isolation of the ovarian cells.
Leptin concentrations were similar in follicular fluid and serum. RTPCR analysis demonstrated that the long, signaling form of the leptin
receptor was expressed in both theca and GC. In cultured GC, leptin
had no effect on estradiol production, alone or in the presence of FSH,
but caused a concentration-related inhibition of the insulin-like
growth factor I (IGF-I) augmentation of FSH-stimulated estradiol
production. The effect of leptin was specific, because there was no
effect on progesterone production. In cultured theca cells, leptin did
not alter androstenedione production, alone or in the presence of LH.
Leptin caused a concentration-related inhibition of the IGF-I augmentation of LH-stimulated androstenedione production. These data
demonstrate that leptin can directly inhibit IGF-I action in ovarian
theca and GC at concentrations commonly present in obese women.
(J Clin Endocrinol Metab 84: 1072–1076, 1999)
T
cellular portion of the full-length receptor that contains motifs necessary for interaction with Janus kinases. Both long
and short forms of the leptin receptor have been demonstrated in the human ovary, and leptin was shown to inhibit
LH-stimulated estradiol production in granulosa luteal cells
obtained from in vitro fertilization procedures (21). It is not
known, however, whether leptin is capable of regulating GC
and/or theca cell (TC) functions in developing follicles.
Because leptin deficiency is exceedingly rare in humans,
the obese mouse model is not relevant to obesity-associated
infertility in women. In contrast to the obese mouse, obese
women have increased levels of leptin, compared with lean
individuals (2). Animal studies in rat (22), porcine (23), and
bovine (24) ovarian cells have demonstrated that leptin can
exert direct inhibitory effects on steroidogenesis in GC and
TC obtained from developing follicles. Leptin has no effect
alone or on gonadotropin-stimulated steroidogenesis, but it
is a potent inhibitor of the insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I)
augmentation of gonadotropin action in rat and bovine cells
(22, 23). The role of leptin in regulating human ovarian steroidogenesis in developing follicles remains unknown. The
objective of these studies was to test the hypothesis that
leptin has direct inhibitory effects on steroidogenesis by human GC and TC.
HE ELUSIVE link between obesity and infertility has
recently been clarified with the cloning of leptin, a
cytokine coded by the obese gene and secreted by adipocytes
(1). Several studies have shown that serum concentrations of
leptin increase proportionally with increasing body fat (2). In
rodents, mutations causing leptin deficiency (ob) (3) or leptin
receptor defects (fatty, diabetic) (4 – 6) cause obesity and infertility associated with hypogonadotropic anovulation (7).
In humans, functional leptin receptor mutations have not
been demonstrated (8 –11); and leptin deficiency is extremely
rare (12–16), but it causes severe childhood obesity when
present (17). Hence, the vast majority of cases of human
obesity are associated with high (rather than low) circulating
leptin concentrations.
The leptin receptor is a member of the type I cytokine
receptor family, with significant homology to gp130 (18), but
gp130 does not seem to be involved in leptin signaling (19).
In addition to a long isoform (thought to be the signaling
form), the human leptin receptor is expressed in at least two
other truncated isoforms, differing at their five prime ends
(20). The short isoforms lack varying segments of the intraReceived June 8, 1998. Revision received December 2, 1998. Accepted
December 8, 1998.
Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Denis Magoffin, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Cedars-Sinai Medical
Center, 8700 Beverly Boulevard, Davis 2066, Los Angeles, California
90048. E-mail: magoffin@cshs.org.
* This research was supported by NICHD Grant HD-33907. Portions
of this research were presented at the 13th Annual Meeting of The
European Society for Human Reproduction and Embryology, Abstract
O-139.
Materials and Methods
Reagents
Human LH (NIDDK-hLH-B1) and human FSH (NIDDK-hFSH-B1)
were a gift from the National Hormone and Pituitary Program of the
NIDDK, NICHD, and USDA (Rockville, MD). Recombinant human
IGF-I was obtained from R&D Systems, Minneapolis, MN. Recombinant
1072
Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/jcem/article/84/3/1072/2864409 by guest on 04 June 2022
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Cedars-Sinai Burns and Allen Research Institute, CedarsSinai Medical Center/University of California Los Angeles School of Medicine, Los Angeles, California
90048
LEPTIN INHIBITS OVARIAN STEROIDOGENESIS
Subjects and tissue isolations
All human tissue samples were obtained during the follicular phase
of the menstrual cycle, from 19 healthy adult women with regular
menstrual cycles, undergoing oophorectomy as part of their surgery for
benign, nonendocrinological conditions unrelated to this study. The
subjects were 41.7 6 0.7 yr of age, with a BMI of 26.3 6 1.2 kg/m2, and
were not taking medications known to affect reproduction, for a minimum of 3 months before surgery. Samples from 24 follicles, 13.0 6 0.7
mm in diameter (range: 9.2–18.5 mm), were studied. Serum samples for
determination of circulating leptin concentrations were collected from
each subject before surgery. Cedars-Sinai Medical Center Institutional
Review Board approval was obtained for this study.
Immediately after oophorectomy, the ovaries were transported to the
laboratory in sterile, ice-cold saline. Follicular fluid (FF) was carefully
and completely aspirated from the ovarian follicles, using a 25-gauge
needle in an avascular region, to avoid blood contamination. The FF was
centrifuged to remove the granulosa cells (GC). After centrifugation, the
FF was frozen (280 C) until assayed for leptin by RIA (Linco Research,
Inc., St. Louis, MO). The aspirated follicles were hemisected, and the
mural GC were collected by gently scraping with a platinum loop and
were pooled with the GC collected from the FF. The GC were isolated
from the blood cells and other cellular debris, using Percoll gradient
centrifugation (25), and were resuspended in serum-free McCoy’s 5a
medium containing 100 U/mL penicillin, 100 mg/mL streptomycin, and
2 mmol/L l-glutamine. The GC viability and concentration were determined by trypan blue exclusion.
After removal of the GC, the theca interna was microdissected from
the follicular walls and incubated (37 C) in collagenase and deoxyribonuclease solution (26) until dispersed into a cell suspension. The TC were
washed and resuspended in serum-free McCoy’s 5a medium containing
100 U/mL penicillin, 100 mg/mL streptomycin, and 2 mmol/L lglutamine. The TC viability and concentration were determined by
trypan blue exclusion.
Cell cultures
GC (5 3 104 viable cells/well) were cultured with 1026 mol/L androstenedione in the presence and absence of FSH (50 ng/mL), IGF-I (50
ng/mL), and leptin (0 –100 ng/mL), in a total vol of 200 mL, in 96-well
plates, at 37 C, for 48 h. Estradiol and progesterone concentrations in the
medium were determined by RIA (Diagnostic Products, Los Angeles,
CA).
The isolated TC (5 3 104 viable cells/well) were cultured in the
presence of LH (0 –100 ng/mL), IGF-I (50 ng/mL), and leptin (0 –100
ng/mL), as indicated, in a total vol of 200 mL, in 96-well plates, at 37 C,
for 48 h. Androstenedione concentrations in the medium were determined by RIA (Diagnostic Products).
Identification of leptin receptor in GC and TC
The receptor splice variants for three isoforms of the leptin receptor
were detected by RT-PCR. RNA was extracted from freshly isolated TC
and GC. The messenger RNA (mRNA) was reverse transcribed into
cDNA, then amplified by PCR using specific primer pairs for the long
(13.2) and two short forms (12.1 and 6.4) of the human leptin receptor
(27). Each primer pair shared a common 59 primer (59-ATCCCCATTGAGAAGTACCAG-39) with specific 39 primers for each isoform (13.2:
59-GGCCTCATAGGTTACCTCAG-39; 12.1: 59-GCAGGGTCATAGGACA-ATAG-39; 6.4: 59-ACTGTTGGGAAGTTGGCACA-39). The amplified bands (13.2: 535 bp; 12.1: 450 bp; 6.4: 350 bp) were separated by
agarose gel electrophoresis and detected by ethidium bromide staining.
Statistical analyses
Treatments were performed in triplicate, and the experiments were
repeated three times. ED50 values were calculated using the fourparameter logistic curve fitting method (28). Multiple comparisons were
performed using one-way ANOVA, with post hoc comparisons employing Tukey’s test. The paired t test was used to compare serum and FF
leptin concentrations. Statistical significance was determined as P # 0.05.
Results
It is known that mature Graafian follicles are capable of
concentrating steroids and gonadotropins in the FF. Certain
molecules present in serum are excluded from FF, leading to
the conclusion that the FF is a semiprotected environment. To
determine whether there are significant differences in leptin
between serum and FF, the concentration of leptin in FF was
compared with the levels in serum collected at the time of
surgery (Fig. 1). The mean concentrations of leptin in serum
and FF were not significantly different (Fig. 1A). When the
data are presented as paired values (Fig. 1B), it is apparent
that leptin in FF varies up or down from serum values up to
approximately 2-fold. In light of the pulsatile nature of leptin
secretion, it is reasonable to infer that leptin is neither excluded from nor sequestered in FF.
We next examined the expression of the long (13.2) and
two short (12.1 and 6.4) isoforms of the leptin receptor in the
TC and GC of healthy developing ovarian follicles. RNA was
isolated from the TC and GC dissected from dominant ovarian follicles with FF androstenedione:estradiol ratios less
than 4. As shown in Fig. 2, the mRNA for the long form of
the leptin receptor was expressed in both TC and GC, indicating that both cell types may be capable of responding to
leptin in developing follicles. The mRNAs for the two short
isoforms were also expressed in both TC and GC.
Because mRNA expression for the signaling isoform of
leptin receptor was identified in both GC and TC, a series of
cell culture experiments were performed to investigate the
direct effects of leptin on steroidogenesis by these cell types.
As shown in Fig. 3, leptin (50 ng/mL) had no effect on basal
estradiol production by GC. As expected, FSH (50 ng/mL)
stimulated estradiol production, and the addition of IGF-I (50
ng/mL) further augmented FSH-stimulated estradiol production. Leptin did not alter the FSH stimulation of estradiol
production, but it completely abolished the IGF-I augmentation of FSH-stimulated estradiol production. The effect of
leptin was dose-related (ED50 5 1.3 6 1.8 ng/mL), with
complete reversal of the IGF-I augmentation of FSH-stimulated estradiol production at physiological leptin concentrations present in obese women (Fig. 4). The effect of leptin was
specific for estradiol production, having no effect on IGF-I
augmentation of FSH-stimulated progesterone production
by GC (Fig. 5).
We next examined the direct effects of leptin on TC an-
Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/jcem/article/84/3/1072/2864409 by guest on 04 June 2022
human leptin was cloned and expressed in our laboratory by a previously published method (7). Leptin produced by this method has been
shown to be active in ob/ob mice (7). Briefly, complementary DNA
(cDNA) corresponding to the mature secreted form of human leptin was
cloned from human adipose issue, using RT-PCR, and ligated in frame
into the pQE30 expression vector (Qiagen, Valencia, CA). The construct
was sequenced to confirm the identity of the clone with the Genbank
sequence (U18915). The human leptin protein was expressed in Escherichia coli with a hexahistidine tag at the amino terminus and was
purified by metal chelate affinity chromatography using nickel nitrilotriacetate resin under denaturing conditions. The eluted protein was
refolded by slow dialysis of the denaturing agent, with final dialysis in
three changes of PBS buffer. The protein concentration was measured by
the method of Bradford using BSA as a standard. Analysis of the purified
protein, by electrophoresis on a 12% SDS-polyacrylamide gel, demonstrated a single band. Measurement of the leptin content of a solution
of the purified protein, by RIA, agreed with the total protein content,
within experimental error.
1073
1074
AGARWAL ET AL.
JCE & M • 1999
Vol 84 • No 3
FIG. 1. Comparison of serum and FF leptin concentrations. Serum
samples were obtained just before oophorectomy. Leptin concentrations in the serum and FF samples were measured by RIA. A, The data
are the mean 6 SEM of 17 women; B, serum and FF values are
presented for individual women.
drogen production. As shown in Fig. 6, LH stimulated a
dose-related (ED50 5 1.78 6 2.1 ng/mL) increase in TC androstenedione production. Addition of IGF-I (50 ng/mL)
increased androstenedione production, alone and at each
concentration of LH, without altering the ED50 for LH stimulation. Concomitant treatment with leptin (50 ng/mL) completely abolished the stimulatory effect of IGF-I (Fig. 6). The
inhibitory effect of leptin was dose-related (ED50 5 6.7 6 5.5
ng/mL), with significant inhibition occurring at physiological concentrations typical of lean women and complete reversal of the IGF-I effect at physiological concentrations typical of obese women (Fig. 7).
Discussion
Small antral follicles seem to exclude certain molecules,
such as FSH, from the FF (29). When a follicle is selected to
become dominant, at approximately 7 mm in diameter, FSH
bioactivity in the FF begins to increase (29); and by the time
a follicle reaches the preovulatory stage of development it
contains high concentrations of FSH, relative to the circulation (30). Our data demonstrate that the concentration of
FIG. 3. Effect of leptin on GC estradiol production. GC were isolated
from healthy dominant follicles and cultured (5 3 104 viable cells/well)
in serum-free McCoy’s 5a medium containing 1026 mol/L androstenedione, for 2 days, in the presence and absence of FSH (50 ng/mL)
and IGF-I (50 ng/mL) with and without leptin (50 ng/mL). Estradiol
in the medium was measured by RIA. The data are the mean 6 SEM
of three experiments with triplicate cultures.
leptin in the FF of developing follicles is similar to the concentration measured in serum, indicating that leptin is neither excluded nor concentrated in the FF. There is variability
within approximately a 2-fold range around the serum concentration. Because circulating leptin is pulsatile, with an
amplitude of 120%, and exhibits diurnal variations on the
order of 3-fold, it seems that there may be a diffusion gradient
for leptin between the circulation and FF. It does not seem,
however, that there is a physiologically important difference
between circulating leptin levels and FF leptin concentrations. These data are consistent with the observation that
leptin concentrations in the serum were similar to the levels
in fluid obtained from follicle aspirations during in vitro
fertilization oocyte retrievals (21).
Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/jcem/article/84/3/1072/2864409 by guest on 04 June 2022
FIG. 2. Expression of leptin receptor mRNAs by human TC and GC.
RNA was extracted from isolated TC and GC from healthy, dominant
follicles. cDNA for the long form of the human leptin receptor (13.2)
and two short isoforms (12.1 and 6.4) were amplified by RT-PCR. The
amplified bands were detected on an ethidium bromide-stained agarose gel. The molecular weight markers are HaeIII digested fX174
DNA.
LEPTIN INHIBITS OVARIAN STEROIDOGENESIS
FIG. 5. Effect of leptin on IGF-I augmentation of FSH-stimulated
progesterone production by human GC. GC (8.8 3 104 viable cells/
well) were cultured in serum-free McCoy’s 5a medium containing
1026 mol/L androstenedione and 50 ng/mL FSH, for 2 days, with and
without IGF-I (50 ng/mL) and increasing concentrations of leptin
(0 –100 ng/mL). Progesterone in the medium was measured by RIA.
The data are the mean 6 SEM of three experiments with triplicate
cultures.
Leptin receptor mRNA has been shown to be expressed in
the human ovary (31). The long form mRNA was recently
shown to be expressed in the TC and GC of the ovary (21).
Our data confirm expression of the long form and demonstrate expression of two alternatively spliced short forms of
the leptin receptor mRNA in both TC and GC.
We have previously shown that leptin has direct effects on
the IGF-I augmentation of FSH-stimulated estradiol production by rat GC (22). These studies demonstrate very similar
direct effects in human GC obtained from unstimulated developing follicles. In addition, we demonstrated direct
FIG. 6. Effect of leptin on androstenedione production by human TC.
Isolated TC (6.6 3 104 viable cells/well) were cultured in serum-free
McCoy’s 5a medium, for 2 days, with increasing concentrations of LH
(0 –100 ng/mL) with and without IGF-I (50 ng/mL) and leptin (50
ng/mL). Androstenedione in the medium was measured by RIA. The
data are the mean 6 SEM of three experiments with triplicate cultures.
FIG. 7. Effect of leptin on IGF-I augmentation of LH-stimulated androstenedione production by human TC. Isolated TC (6.6 3 104 viable
cells/well) were cultured in serum-free McCoy’s 5a medium containing LH (50 ng/mL), for 2 days, with increasing concentrations of leptin
(0 –100 ng/mL) with and without IGF-I (50 ng/mL). Androstenedione
in the medium was measured by RIA. The data are the mean 6 SEM
of three experiments with triplicate cultures.
inhibitory effects of leptin on the IGF-I augmentation of
LH-stimulated androgen production by human TC. Interestingly, the concentrations of leptin that are commonly
found in obese women completely suppressed the stimulatory effects of IGF-I in vitro. Taken together, these results
indicate that high physiological concentrations of leptin
could significantly interfere with the ability of the dominant
follicle to produce estradiol, both by inhibiting the production of androgen substrate and by decreasing the aromatizing capacity of the GC. The inhibitory effect of leptin on the
GC was specific to estradiol production and did not alter the
effects of IGF-I on progesterone production. This observation
Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/jcem/article/84/3/1072/2864409 by guest on 04 June 2022
FIG. 4. Effect of leptin on the IGF-I augmentation of FSH-stimulated
estradiol production by human GC. GC (8.8 3 104 viable cells/well)
were cultured in serum-free McCoy’s 5a medium containing 1026
mol/L androstenedione and 50 ng/mL FSH, for 2 days, with and
without IGF-I (50 ng/mL) and increasing concentrations of leptin
(0 –100 ng/mL). Estradiol in the medium was measured by RIA. The
data are the mean 6 SEM of three experiments with triplicate cultures.
1075
1076
AGARWAL ET AL.
References
1. Zhang Y, Proenca R, Maffei M, Barone M, Leopold L, Friedman JM. 1994
Positional cloning of the mouse obese gene and its human homologue. Nature.
372:425– 432.
2. Magoffin DA, Huang CTF. 1998 Leptin and reproduction. The Endocrinologist. 8:79 – 86.
3. Coleman DL. 1978 Obese and diabetes: two mutant genes causing diabetesobesity syndromes in mice. Diabetologia. 14:141–148.
4. Chua SC, Chung WK, Wu-Peng XS, et al. 1996 Phenotypes of mouse diabetes
and rat fatty due to mutations in the OB (leptin) receptor. Science. 271:994 –996.
5. Chen H, Charlat O, Tartaglia L, et al. 1996 Evidence that the diabetes gene
encodes the leptin receptor: identification of a mutation in the leptin receptor
gene in db/db mice. Cell. 84:491– 495.
6. Lee G-H, Proenca R, Montez JM, et al. 1996 Abnormal splicing of the leptin
receptor in diabetic mice. Nature. 379:632– 635.
7. Chehab FF, Lim ME, Lu R. 1996 Correction of the sterility defect in homozygous obese female mice by treatment with the human recombinant leptin. Nat
Genet. 12:318 –320.
8. Chung WK, Power KL, Chua M, et al. 1997 Exonic and intronic sequence
variation in the human leptin receptor gene (LEPR). Diabetes. 46:1509 –1511.
9. Gotoda T, Manning BS, Goldstone AP, et al. 1997 Leptin receptor gene
variation and obesity: lack of association in a white British male population.
Hum Mol Genet. 6:869 – 876.
10. Echwald SM, Sorensen TD, Sorensen TI, et al. 1997 Amino acid variants in
the human leptin receptor: lack of association to juvenile onset obesity. Biochem Biophys Res Commun. 233:248 –252.
11. Matsuoka N, Ogawa Y, Hosoda K, et al. 1997 Human leptin receptor gene in
obese Japanese subjects: evidence against either obesity-causing mutations or
association of sequence variants with obesity. Diabetologia. 40:1204 –1210.
12. Carlsson B, Lindell K, Gabrielsson B, et al. 1997 Obese (ob) gene defects are
rare in human obesity. Obes Res. 5:30 –35.
13. Maffei M, Stoffel M, Barone M, et al. 1996 Absence of mutations in the human
OB gene in obese/diabetic subjects. Diabetes. 45:679 – 682.
14. Considine RV, Considine EL, Williams CJ, et al. 1996 Mutation screening and
identification of a sequence variation in the human ob gene coding region.
Biochem Biophys Res Commun. 220:735–739.
15. Echwald SM, Rasmussen SB, Sorensen TI, et al. 1997 Identification of two
novel missense mutations in the human OB gene. Int J Obes Relat Metab
Disord. 21:321–326.
16. Hinney A, Bornscheuer A, Depenbusch M, et al. 1998 Absence of leptin
deficiency mutation in extremely obese German children and adolescents. Int
J Obes Relat Metab Disord. 21:1190 –1190.
17. Montague CT, Farooqi IS, Whitehead JP, et al. 1997 Congenital leptin deficiency is associated with severe early-onset obesity in humans. Nature.
387:903–908.
18. Baumann H, Morella KK, White DW, et al. 1996 The full-length leptin receptor
has signaling capabilities of interleukin 6-type cytokine receptors. Proc Natl
Acad Sci USA. 93:8374 – 8378.
19. Nakashima K, Narazaki M, Taga T. 1997 Overlapping and distinct signals
through leptin receptor (OB-R) and a closely related cytokine signal transducer, gp130. FEBS Lett. 401:49 –52.
20. Fei H, Okano HJ, Li C, et al. 1997 Anatomic localization of alternatively spliced
leptin receptors (Ob-R) in mouse brain and other tissues. Proc Natl Acad Sci
USA. 94:7001–7005.
21. Karlsson C, Lindell K, Svensson E, et al. 1997 Expression of functional leptin
receptors in the human ovary. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 28:4144 – 4148.
22. Zachow RJ, Magoffin DA. 1997 Direct intraovarian effects of leptin: impairment of the synergistic action of insulin-like growth factor-I on follicle-stimulating hormone-dependent estradiol-17b production by rat ovarian granulosa cells. Endocrinology. 138:847– 850.
23. Spicer LJ, Francisco CC. 1997 The adipose obese gene product, leptin: evidence
of a direct inhibitory role in ovarian function. Endocrinology. 138:3374 –3379.
24. Spicer LJ, Francisco CC. 1998 Adipose obese gene product, leptin, inhibits
bovine ovarian theca cell steroidogenesis. Biol Reprod. 58:207–212.
25. Magoffin DA. 1993 Human granulosa and granulosa luteal cells in culture. In:
Chapin RE, Heindel J, eds. Methods in toxicology. Orlando: Academic Press;
289 –294.
26. Magoffin DA, Erickson GF. 1982 Primary culture of differentiating ovarian
androgen-producing cells in defined medium. J Biol Chem. 257:4507– 4513.
27. Bennett BD, Solar GP, Yuan JQ, Mathias J, Thomas GR, Matthews W. 1996
A role for leptin and its cognate receptor in hematopoiesis. Curr Biol.
6:1170 –1180.
28. De Lean A, Munson PJ, Rodbard D. 1978 Simultaneous analysis of families
of sigmoidal curves: application to bioassay, radioligand assay, and physiological dose-response curves. Am J Physiol. 235:E97–E102.
29. Jakimiuk AJ, Weitsman SR, Brzechffa PR, Magoffin DA. 1998 Aromatase
messenger ribonucleic acid expression in individual follicles from polycystic
ovaries. Mol Hum Reprod. 4:1– 8.
30. McNatty KP, Hunter WM, McNeilly AS, Sawers RS. 1975 Changes in the
concentration of pituitary and steroid hormones in the follicular fluid of human
graafian follicles throughout the menstrual cycle. J Endocrinol. 64:555–571.
31. Cioffi JA, Shafer AW, Zupancic TJ, et al. 1996 Novel B219.OB receptor isoforms: possible role of leptin in hematopoiesis and reproduction. Nat Med.
2:585–589.
32. Brzechffa PR, Jakimiuk AJ, Agarwal SK, et al. 1996 Serum immunoreactive
leptin concentrations in women with polycystic ovary syndrome. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 81:4166 – 4169.
33. Chapman IM, Wittert GA, Norman RJ. 1997 Circulating leptin concentrations
in polycystic ovary syndrome: relation to anthropometric and metabolic parameters. Clin Endocrinol (Oxf). 46:175–181.
34. Mantzoros CS, Dunaif A, Flier JS. 1997 Leptin concentrations in the polycystic
ovary syndrome. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 82:1687–1691.
35. Laughlin GA, Morales AJ, Yen SSC. 1997 Serum leptin levels in women with
polycystic ovary syndrome: the role of insulin resistance/hyperinsulinemia.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 82:1692–1696.
36. Rouru J, Anttila L, Koskinen P, et al. 1997 Serum leptin concentrations in
women with polycystic ovary syndrome. J Clin Endocrinol Metab.
82:1697–1700.
37. Zeleznik AJ, Fairchild-Benyo D. 1994 Control of follicular development, corpus luteum function, and the recognition of pregnancy in higher primates. In:
Knobil E, Neill JD, eds. The physiology of reproduction. New York: Raven
Press, Ltd.; 751–782.
38. Kiddy DS, Hamilton-Fairley D, Bush A, et al. 1992 Improvement in endocrine
and ovarian function during dietary treatment of obese women with polycystic
ovary syndrome. Clin Endocrinol (Oxf). 36:105–111.
Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/jcem/article/84/3/1072/2864409 by guest on 04 June 2022
demonstrates that leptin does not block IGF-I signaling in the
GC and suggests that leptin may specifically interfere with
aromatase enzyme expression or activity.
The effects of leptin on insulin action in the ovary remain
to be determined, but the potential exists for leptin to have
a similar negative impact on insulin action in the ovary as it
does on IGF-I action. If this were to be the case, elevated
leptin concentrations in obese women might exacerbate the
deleterious effects of insulin resistance in the polycystic
ovary syndrome (PCOS). Initial evidence suggested that elevations of circulating leptin might be associated with a
certain segment of women with PCOS (32); however, several
subsequent papers were unable to demonstrate differences
in leptin concentrations between women with PCOS and
regularly cycling control women (33–36). Thus, the evidence
does not support a causative role for leptin in PCOS; however, our data support the concept that the higher concentrations of leptin found in obese women can make them more
susceptible to infertility.
The physiological significance of leptin, with respect to
ovarian function, is likely to be as a modulator of ovarian
responses to trophic stimuli. In obese women, high concentrations of leptin may counteract the sensitizing effects of
locally produced growth factors. It is thought that production of sensitizing molecules, such as IGF-I by dominant
follicles, augments the stimulatory effects of FSH, thereby
giving dominant follicles a growth and developmental advantage, with respect to cohort follicles (37). Because the FSH
concentration declines from the mid- to the late-follicular
phase of the menstrual cycle, the dominant follicle is able to
continue to grow and develop, whereas the cohort follicles
have inadequate trophic stimulus and undergo atresia. The
potential exists that high concentrations of leptin may interfere with development of the dominant follicle and suppress
its estradiol production. Such an effect could result in an
inadequate stimulus for the LH surge and may also lead to
an immature preovulatory follicle or, in extreme cases, no
preovulatory follicle at all. This type of mechanism is consistent with clinical observations that obese women have a
higher incidence of infertility and that weight loss often
causes significant clinical improvement (38).
JCE & M • 1999
Vol 84 • No 3