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Publication : Leptin Controls Parasympathetic Wiring of the Pancreas during Embryonic Life.

First Author  Croizier S Year  2016
Journal  Cell Rep Volume  15
Issue  1 Pages  36-44
PubMed ID  27052164 Mgi Jnum  J:235085
Mgi Id  MGI:5792765 Doi  10.1016/j.celrep.2016.02.088
Citation  Croizier S, et al. (2016) Leptin Controls Parasympathetic Wiring of the Pancreas during Embryonic Life. Cell Rep 15(1):36-44
abstractText  The autonomic nervous system plays a critical role in glucose metabolism through both its sympathetic and parasympathetic branches, but the mechanisms that underlie the development of the autonomic innervation of the pancreas remain poorly understood. Here, we report that cholinergic innervation of pancreatic islets develops during mid-gestation under the influence of leptin. Leptin-deficient mice display a greater cholinergic innervation of pancreatic islets beginning in embryonic life, and this increase persists into adulthood. Remarkably, a single intracerebroventricular injection of leptin in embryos caused a permanent reduction in parasympathetic innervation of pancreatic beta cells and long-term impairments in glucose homeostasis. These developmental effects of leptin involve a direct inhibitory effect on the outgrowth of preganglionic axons from the hindbrain. These studies reveal an unanticipated regulatory role of leptin on the parasympathetic nervous system during embryonic development and may have important implications for our understanding of the early mechanisms that contribute to diabetes.
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