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Global loss of metabolic responsiveness and elevated enzyme in leptin deficient obese mice during starvation.

PubMed
Authors: Li D, Morita K, Kokaji T, Hatano A, Hirayama A, Soga T, Suzuki Y, Matsumoto M, Tsuchiya T, Ozaki H, Ohno S, Inoue H, Inaba Y, Maehara H, Sugimoto H, Pan Y, Kuroda S

Year

2026

Paper ID

25399

Status

Peer-reviewed

Abstract Read

~2 min

Abstract Words

171

Citations

0

Abstract

Starvation induces complex metabolic adaptations in skeletal muscle, a key tissue for maintaining energy homeostasis; however, these adaptations are largely impaired in obesity. How obesity alters global metabolic adaptations to starvation in skeletal muscle remains unclear. Here, we analyzed the metabolic adaptations on a trans-omics scale during starvation in skeletal muscle from wild-type (WT) and leptin-deficient obese (ob/ob) mice. We measured multi-omics data during starvation and constructed global trans-omics networks in WT and ob/ob mice. We found that starvation induces "responsiveness" in WT mice, characterized by increases or decreases in key regulator metabolites, including ATP and AMP, as well as enzyme proteins, leading to global regulation of metabolic pathways, which was lost in ob/ob mice. In contrast, during starvation, ob/ob mice exhibit "difference" in comparison to WT mice, manifested by the persistently elevated expression of metabolic enzymes. These features were similarly found in liver, another key metabolic organ. Thus, global loss of responsiveness and elevated enzyme proteins are systemic features of metabolic dysregulation in ob/ob mice.

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  • Starvation induces complex metabolic adaptations in skeletal muscle, a key tissue for maintaining energy homeostasis; however, these adaptations are largely impaired in obesity.

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Current Paper #25399 #68465 Bounding Eigenstate Overlap fro... #68440 Classical State Preparation for... #68437 Transition-state lattice modes ... #68423 Selective Fermi-Level Pinning: ...

External citation index: OpenAlex citation signal • updated 2026-06-11 09:09:52

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