1 Clinical Diabetes and Nutrition Section, National Institutes of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Phoenix, Arizona
2 Clinical Physiology, Baker Heart Research Institute, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
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ABSTRACT |
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Pancreatic polypeptide (PP) is a 36amino acid peptide produced by the F-cells of the pancreas. After ingestion of a meal, PP is released rapidly into the circulation, where levels remain elevated for several hours (1). In the brain, PP exerts a predominantly orexigenic effect when administered directly (2). In the gastrointestinal tract, PP inhibits gastric emptying rate, exocrine pancreatic secretion, and gallbladder motility (3), and in contrast to its central effects, intraperitoneal administration of PP decreases food intake and increases energy expenditure (2). Repeated administration of PP to obesity-prone animals suppressed excessive weight gain (4), and mice who overexpress PP in the pancreas because of genetic manipulation are characterized by decreased food intake and lower body weight (5).
Altered PP secretion has been reported in clinical syndromes associated with abnormal eating behavior in humans. Subjects with Prader-Willi syndrome, a genetic form of obesity characterized by extreme hyperphagia, have a diminished PP response to a meal (6). Decreased postprandial secretion of PP has also been observed in individuals with morbid obesity (7), whereas subjects with anorexia nervosa are characterized by an exaggerated postprandial release of PP (8,9). Exogenous administration of PP was followed by decreased food intake in Prader-Willi syndrome (10) and in healthy individuals (11), suggesting that increasing PP pharmacologically may represent a therapeutic option for the treatment of obesity (12).
Surprisingly, the Pima Indians of Arizona, a population with excessive weight gain beginning at a very early age (13,14), are characterized by elevated circulating PP. This is true for children, who have higher fasting plasma PP concentrations than their age- and sex-matched Caucasian counterparts (15), and in adults, who have elevated fasting concentrations and enhanced postprandial secretion of PP (1517). Although these observations seem to be inconsistent with a proposed anorexigenic effect of PP, their cross-sectional nature does not establish whether abnormal PP secretion is involved in the etiology of obesity in this population. Because prospective studies are better suited to identifying risk factors for the development of a disease, we have examined the effect of fasting and postprandial PP levels on prospective changes in body weight in nondiabetic Pima Indians. We hypothesized that increased fasting and postprandial PP secretion would be associated with a decreased risk of weight gain.
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RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS |
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At baseline, all subjects were between 18 and 50 years of age and normal glucose tolerant according to an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT; World Health Organization 1999 criteria) (18). The subjects were nonsmokers and, except for obesity, healthy according to a physical examination and routine laboratory tests. For the baseline visit, all subjects were admitted for 810 days to the National Institutes of Health Clinical Research Unit in Phoenix, Arizona. On admission, they were fed a weight-maintaining diet (50, 30, and 20% of daily calories provided as carbohydrate, fat, and protein, respectively) and abstained from strenuous exercise. Height and weight were measured with subjects wearing a preweighed hospital gown and without shoes. BMI was calculated as weight in kilograms divided by the square of height in meters. Percentage of body fat (% body fat) was assessed by underwater weighing, with determination of residual lung volume by helium dilution (19), or by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DPX-L; Lunar, Madison, WI), using a conversion equation to make measurements comparable between the methods (20). At least 3 days after admission and after a 12-h overnight fast, all subjects underwent a 2-h 75-g OGTT. Plasma glucose concentrations were determined by the glucose-oxidase method (Beckman Instruments, Fullerton, CA).
At the baseline visit, subjects underwent a standardized mixed meal test as previously described (21). In brief, at 7:00 A.M., after a 12-h overnight fast, an intravenous catheter was placed in an antecubital vein for blood sampling and kept patent with a 0.9% saline infusion. Subjects rested quietly in bed throughout the test. At 8:00 A.M., after two baseline blood samples were drawn at 15 and 0 min, subjects consumed a standard test meal (toast, butter, jelly, scrambled eggs, and orange juice) containing 20% of their estimated 24-h sedentary energy expenditure distributed as 40, 44, and 16% of calories from carbohydrate, fat, and protein, respectively. All subjects finished the meal within 15 min. A postprandial blood sample was drawn at 30 min. All blood samples were drawn with prechilled syringes, transferred into prechilled tubes, and immediately placed on ice. All tubes were cold-centrifuged (4°C) within minutes of collection, and the plasma aliquots were kept frozen until assayed. Plasma PP concentrations were measured by radioimmunoassay in the 15- and 30-min plasma samples (intra-assay variation 2.2%; Alpco, Windham, NH).
At the follow-up visit, subjects were admitted to the clinical research unit as described above (n = 27) or were studied as outpatients after an overnight fast (n = 6). All subjects underwent a physical examination, which included height, weight, and waist and thigh circumference measurements, and a 75-g OGTT. The subjects who were diabetic at follow-up, according to World Health Organization criteria (18), were excluded from the prospective analyses.
The protocol was approved by the tribal council of the Gila River Indian Community and by the institutional review board of the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases. All subjects provided written informed consent before participation.
Statistical analyses.
Statistical analyses were performed using the procedures of the SAS Institute (Cary, N.C.). Results are presented as means ± SD. Postprandial PP response was expressed as postprandial concentration of PP (at 30 min) and as absolute and relative change from fasting level. Absolute change was calculated as the difference between the postprandial and fasting levels whereas relative changes were calculated as absolute change divided by fasting levels and expressed as a percentage. To approximate a normal distribution, PP concentrations were logarithmically transformed before statistical analysis.
In the cross-sectional analyses, relationships between PP levels and body weight, BMI, percent body fat, and fasting and 2-h plasma glucose were examined by calculating Pearson correlation coefficients.
Prospective changes in body weight and waist circumference were calculated as the absolute (follow-up minus baseline) and relative (follow-up minus baseline divided by baseline) differences between follow-up and baseline measurements. Pearson correlation coefficients were then calculated to estimate the correlation of fasting and postprandial concentrations of PP with changes in body weight and waist circumference. General linear regression models were also used to evaluate the effect of PP concentrations on body weight and waist circumference at follow-up adjusted for baseline body weight and/or waist circumference, age and time of follow-up. Models including waist circumference were additionally adjusted for changes in body weight. Differences in anthropometric and metabolic measurements between the two visits were assessed by paired Students t test.
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RESULTS |
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DISCUSSION |
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The results of the present study indicate that, similar to other populations (7), fasting and postprandial PP secretion in Pima Indian male subjects is negatively associated with obesity. Our prospective analyses also show that greater PP secretion after ingestion of a meal is associated with reduced weight gain. In human studies, decreased appetite and food intake were found after acute administration of pharmacological doses of PP (10,11). Our results are consistent with studies in mice showing reduced food intake and lower body weight gain after peripheral administration of PP at doses that increased plasma levels in a manner similar to meal ingestion (2,22).
Several physiological mechanisms could explain the anorexigenic effect of postprandial PP release. Rapid gastric emptying rate has been described in obesity (23), and administration of PP to mice is followed by inhibition of gastric emptying (22). However, in humans, PP had no effect on the gastric emptying rate in a study involving five subjects (24); moreover, the decrease in hunger after PP administration was shown to precede meal ingestion, suggesting that at least part of the anorexigenic effect of PP may not involve changes in gastric emptying (11).
Because intracerebroventricular administration of PP has orexigenic effects (2), peripheral pathways are thought to mediate the anorexigenic effects of PP. Resection of the hepatic vagal nerves abolishes the anorexigenic effect of PP in mice (4). It has been also observed that hepatic vagotomy eliminates PP-induced sympathetic activation of the visceral adipose tissue and adrenal glands (4). Because abdominal fat is characterized by more dense sympathetic innervations than other fat depots (rev. in 25), changes in sympathetic activity, which has mainly lipolytic effects, may explain the negative association between postprandial PP levels and abdominal fat accumulation in our study.
Although mounting evidence suggests that PP is an anorexigenic hormone (4,11,22), previous studies in Pima Indians, a population that is very prone to obesity, have led to the unexpected finding of increased fasting levels and enhanced postmeal secretion of PP in this population compared with Caucasians (1517). Here we show that, also unexpectedly, high levels of PP under fasting conditions were associated with increased weight gain. Although these results are difficult to reconcile with the established anorexigenic effects of PP, we offer a few possible interpretations of the findings.
The positive relationship between fasting PP levels and weight gain may simply be a type 1 statistical error. Nevertheless, although the number of subjects involved in our prospective analyses was indeed small, it is worth noting the consistency of the association over different statistical models. Thus, it is somewhat difficult to dismiss the finding solely on statistical grounds.
PP binds with a high affinity to Y4 receptors found in brain areas involved in the control of food intake (2628). In fact, Y4 receptor knockout mice are lean, despite elevated circulating concentrations of PP (29). It is very difficult, however, to understand how fasting, but not postprandial PP, may be a marker of this central orexigenic effect. Downregulation of central Y4 receptors is an unlikely explanation because this would blunt the central orexigenic effect of PP and predict no, or an inverse, correlation between fasting PP levels in the circulation and body weight changes. It is also not supported by in vitro experiments (30). Early postprandial PP release is primarily under vagal control (1). Because direct injection of PP into the dorsal motor nucleus inhibits vagal tone to the pancreas (31), another possible explanation is that high fasting PP levels tonically inhibit parasympathetic centers in brainstem, thus decreasing early postprandial PP secretion.
The main limitation of the study is that single time point measurements were obtained for both fasting and postprandial PP. Although we have no information on the within-subject variability of fasting PP levels in this study, we acknowledge that in previous studies we have experienced average coefficients of variation as low as 1.7% (15) and as high as 23% (17). In this study, we have used the PP levels measured 30 min after the administration of a meal as a measure of postprandial PP release. However, postprandial secretion of PP is characterized by a rapid first phase that is followed by a slow decline, depending on the macronutrient composition of meal (1). The results of our more recent study (17) showed that in Pima Indians, PP peaks within 30 min after meal ingestion, suggesting that our single time point is a good proxy for early postprandial PP response. However, PP concentration at 30 min after meal ingestion in the later study showed a strong correlation with both early (030 min) and 2-h PP responses (area under the curve, r = 0.85 and 0.86, respectively; P < 0.0001).
In conclusion, our results provide the first evidence that circulating PP concentrations within the physiological range may contribute to the regulation of energy balance in humans. However, this contribution appears to be more complex than anticipated because of the seemingly opposite effects of fasting and postprandial PP concentrations on the risk of future weight gain.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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Address correspondence and reprint requests to Juraj Koska, MD, PhD, Clinical Diabetes and Nutrition Section, National Institutes of Health, 4212 N. 16th St., Rm. 5-41, Phoenix, AZ 85016. E-mail: jkoska{at}mail.nih.gov
Received for publication May 10, 2004 and accepted in revised form August 23, 2004
OGTT, oral glucose tolerance test; PP, pancreatic polypeptide
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REFERENCES |
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