PLoS ONE (Feb 2011)

Inflammatory adipokines, high molecular weight adiponectin, and insulin resistance: a population-based survey in prepubertal schoolchildren.

  • Giuseppe Murdolo,
  • Bettina Nowotny,
  • Federica Celi,
  • Miranda Donati,
  • Vittorio Bini,
  • Francesco Papi,
  • Gabi Gornitzka,
  • Serena Castellani,
  • Michael Roden,
  • Adriano Falorni,
  • Christian Herder,
  • Alberto Falorni

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0017264
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 2
p. e17264

Abstract

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BackgroundThe aim of this study was to investigate sex differences and associations of high molecular weight (HMW) adiponectin, leptin and proinflammatory adipokines, individually or in combinations, with adiposity and insulin resistance (IR) measures in prepubertal childhood.MethodologyWe studied 305 prepubertal children (boys/girls: 144/161; Tanner stage 1; age: 5-13 yr), included in a cohort of 44,231 adolescents who participated in an extensive Italian school-based survey. According to Cole's criteria, 105 individuals were lean (L; boys/girls: 59/46), 60 overweight (OW; boys/girls: 32/28) and 140 obese (OB; boys/girls: 70/70). Measurements comprised total and HMW adiponectin, leptin, as well as a panel of proinflammatory adipokines/chemokines associated with diabetes risk.Principal findingsLeptin-, and the leptin-to-HMW adiponectin ratio (L/HMW)-, increased progressively (pConclusionsIn prepubertal children, leptin emerges as a sex-independent discrimination marker of adiposity degree and as a useful, sex-associated predictor of the systemic insulin resistance.