High-fat diets cause peripheral leptin resistance, and dietary lipid composition affects sensitivity to leptin. We examined the role of n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) in peripheral leptin resistance. Dietary PUFAs (0.4% wt/wt) caused insensitivity to peripherally but not intracerebroventricularly administered leptin. n-3 PUFA increased body weight, associated with a significant reduction of leptin concentration in the cerebrospinal fluid. Dietary n-3 PUFA reduced transport of endogenous or exogenously administered leptin into the brain, associated with increased expression of hypothalamic occludin, but caused no change in expression of leptin receptors, proteins associated with leptin signaling or other tight junction proteins. Continuous intracerebroventricular infusion of an antisense morpholino oligonucleotide targeted to occludin mRNA reversed n-3 PUFA-induced insensitivity to peripherally administered leptin. We conclude that n-3 PUFA induces peripheral leptin resistance via an increase in the expression of hypothalamic occludin, reducing paracellular transport of leptin into the brain.