Leptin facilitates learning and memory performance and enhances hippocampal CA1 long-term potentiation and CaMK II phosphorylation in rats.

2006 
Abstract Leptin, an adipocytokine encoded by an obesity gene and expressed in adipose tissue, affects feeding behavior, thermogenesis, and neuroendocrine status via leptin receptors distributed in the brain, especially in the hypothalamus. Leptin may also modulate the synaptic plasticity and behavioral performance related to learning and memory since: leptin receptors are found in the hippocampus, and both leptin and its receptor share structural and functional similarities with the interleukin-6 family of cytokines that modulate long-term potentiation (LTP) in the hippocampus. We therefore examined the effect of leptin on (1) behavioral performance in emotional and spatial learning tasks, (2) LTP at Schaffer collateral-CA1 synapses, (3) presynaptic and postsynaptic activities in hippocampal CA1 neurons, (4) the intracellular Ca 2+ concentration ([Ca 2+ ] i ) in CA1 neurons, and (5) the activity of Ca 2+ /calmodulin protein kinase II (CaMK II) in the hippocampal CA1 tissue that exhibits LTP. Intravenous injection of 5 and/or 50 μg/kg, but not of 500 μg/kg leptin, facilitated behavioral performance in passive avoidance and Morris water-maze tasks. Bath application of 10 −12  M leptin in slice experiments enhanced LTP and increased the presynaptic transmitter release, whereas 10 −10  M leptin suppressed LTP and reduced the postsynaptic receptor sensitivity to N -methyl- d -aspartic acid. The increase in the [Ca 2+ ] i induced by 10 −10  M leptin was two times greater than that induced by 10 −12  M leptin. In addition, the facilitation (10 −12  M) and suppression (10 −10  M) of LTP by leptin was closely associated with an increase and decrease in Ca 2+ -independent activity of CaMK II. Our results show that leptin not only affects hypothalamic functions (such as feeding, thermogenesis, and neuroendocrine status), but also modulates higher nervous functions, such as the behavioral performance related to learning and memory and hippocampal synaptic plasticity.
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