Leptin gene therapy and daily protein administration: a comparative study in the ob/ob mouse

Abstract
We have compared the efficacy of daily injection of recombinant leptin protein (rh-leptin) with adenovirus-mediated delivery of the murine or human leptin gene (Ad-leptin) for treatment of obesity in the obese (ob/ob) mouse model. We demonstrate an improved correction profile for obesity and associated surrogate markers using the adenovirus delivery method. Rate of weight loss and percentage satiety were significantly greater in the mice treated with Ad-leptin. These findings were associated with lower peak serum leptin levels with Ad-leptin (22.9 ± 2.6 ng/ml for the human gene, and 48.9 ± 11.5 ng/ml for the murine gene) compared to rh-leptin (385.2 ± 36.0 ng/ml). (Values are given as mean ± standard error of the mean.) Importantly, rh-leptin and ex vivo-expressed Ad-leptin were equivalently active in a functional cell-based assay. The primary difference in the two therapeutic approaches is the continuous chronic secretion of leptin mediated by gene delivery, versus the intermittent bolus delivery and rapid clearance of the daily injection of rh-leptin protein. Thus, in vivo findings suggest that leptin effects are better achieved at lower steady-state levels, a pharmacological feature attained here by gene therapy. These findings may have implications for the potential use of leptin in the treatment of obesity.