作者
Matthäus Metz,Marianna Beghini,Peter Wolf,Lorenz Pfleger,Martina Häckl,Magdalena Bastian,Angelika Freudenthaler,Jürgen Harreiter,Maximilian Zeyda,Sabina Baumgartner‐Parzer,Rodrig Marculescu,Nara Marella,J. Thomas Hannich,Georg Györi,Gabriela Berlakovich,Michael Roden,Michael Krebs,Robert Risti,Aivar Lóokene,Michael Trauner,Alexandra Kautzky‐Willer,Martin Krššák,Herbert Stangl,Clemens Fürnsinn,Thomas Scherer
摘要
Recombinant human leptin (metreleptin) reduces hepatic lipid content in patients with lipodystrophy and overweight patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and relative hypoleptinemia independent of its anorexic action. In rodents, leptin signaling in the brain increases very-low-density lipoprotein triglyceride (VLDL-TG) secretion and reduces hepatic lipid content via the vagus nerve. In this randomized, placebo-controlled crossover trial (EudraCT Nr. 2017-003014-22), we tested whether a comparable mechanism regulates hepatic lipid metabolism in humans. A single metreleptin injection stimulated hepatic VLDL-TG secretion (primary outcome) and reduced hepatic lipid content in fasted, lean men (n = 13, age range 20-38 years) but failed to do so in metabolically healthy liver transplant recipients (n = 9, age range 26-62 years) who represent a model for hepatic denervation. In an independent cohort of lean men (n = 10, age range 23-31 years), vagal stimulation by modified sham feeding replicated the effects of metreleptin on VLDL-TG secretion. Therefore, we propose that leptin has anti-steatotic properties that are independent of food intake by stimulating hepatic VLDL-TG export via a brain-vagus-liver axis.