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Genetic mutation linked to severe obesity


Mice gain weight even when fed normal amounts of food;
similar mutation linked to severe obesity in humans.

BOSTON, July 18, 2013 /PRNewswire-USNewswire



    ㅡ Researchers at Boston Children's Hospital have identified a genetic cause of severe obesity that, though rare, raises new questions
    about weight gain and
    energy use in the general obese population.
    The research, published in the journal Science on July 19, involved
    genetic surveys of several groups of obese humans and experiments
    in mice. Mice with the genetic mutation gained weight even
    while eating the same amount of food as their normal counterparts;
    the affected gene,
    Mrap2, has a human counterpart (MRAP2) and appears to be
    involved in regulating metabolism and food consumption.
    "These mice aren't burning the fat, they're somehow holding onto it,"
    says the study's lead investigator Joseph Majzoub, MD,
    chief of endocrinology at Boston Children's.
     
    "Mice with the genetic mutation gained more weight, and we found
    similar mutations in a cohort of obese humans.
    " The protein created by the Mrap2 gene appears to facilitate signaling to
    a receptor in the brain called Mc4r, which helps increase metabolism and
    decrease appetite as part of a larger signaling chain involved in
    energy regulation. Fat cells produce the hormone leptin, prompting
    receptors in the brain to instigate production of a second hormone, I±MSH.
    Mc4r detects this hormone with the aid of Mrap2, leading to a decrease
    in appetite and weight. Mutations in this signaling chain,
    including mutations in Mc4r, are known to increase the likelihood of obesity.
     
    Majzoub, first author Masato Asai, MD, PhD, now at Nagoya University
    in Japan, and colleagues studied mice with the Mrap2 gene knocked out
    both overall and just in the brain. In both cases, the mice grew to
    about twice their normal size. Weight gain was greatest when
    both copies of Mrap2 were knocked out,
    but the mice still showed weight gain and appetite increase with
    one working copy of the gene.
    The weight gain was more pronounced in males than females.
    In addition, the mice without Mrap2 had more exaggerated weight gain
    when fed a high-fat diet than normal mice.
    Surprisingly, while the mice without Mrap2 didn't eat more at first,
    they still gained weight faster than the controls.
    Later, their appetites increased and they continued to gain
    more weight than the controls, even when held to the same diet and
    quantity of food.
    In the end, the mutant mice had to be underfed by 10 to 15 percent
    to show the same weight gain as their normal peers.
    As soon as they were let off
    the restricted diet, their weight gain increased.
    To investigate the gene in humans, Majzoub collaborated with
    Sadaf Farooqi, MD, PhD, of the University of Cambridge, and others
    to investigate groups of obese patients from around the world.
    The team found four mutations in the human equivalent of Mrap2
    among the 500 people, all in patients with severe, early-onset obesity;
    each of the four affected patients had only one copy of the mutation.
    While the finding suggests that these rare mutations directly
    cause obesity in less than 1 percent of the obese population,
    the researchers suspect that
    other mutations in the gene might occur more commonly and
    might interact with other mutations and environmental factors
    to cause more common forms
    of obesity.
     
    "We found other mutations that weren't as clearly damaging to the gene,"
    notes Majzoub.
    "It's possible that some of these more common mutations actually
    are pathogenic, especially in combination with other genes in the same
    pathway."
     
    One intriguing theory, called the thrifty-gene hypothesis, holds that
    rare mutations in genes like Mrap2 exist because they gave humans
    an evolutionary advantage in times of severe famine.
    Further investigation into how these mutations work may lend insight into
    the body's mechanisms for energy storage and use.
    In the present study, the lab did not observe anything to explain why
    the mutant mice were storing more food energy, such as a difference
    in activity level or heat output.
    Majzoub and his colleagues look forward to expanding
    the scope of the research, studying additional populations of obese people, including measures of their activity and diet, as well as
    further exploring how the gene alters energy balance.
    The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health and
    other government, foundation and philanthropic grants.
    The team included researchers from Boston Children's Hospital;
    the University of Cambridge and the NIHR Cambridge Biomedical
    Research Centre (UK);
    North Carolina State University; Queen Mary, University of London;
    Lund University (Sweden) and Steno Diabetes Center (Denmark);
    the Karolinksa Institute (Sweden); Harvard Medical School and
    the Broad Institute. About Boston Children's Hospital Boston
    Children's Hospital
    is home to the world's largest research enterprise based
    at a pediatric medical
    center, where its discoveries have benefited both children and adults
    since 1869. More than 1,100 scientists, including nine members of
    the National Academy of
    Sciences, 11 members of the Institute of Medicine and 12 members of
    the Howard Hughes Medical Institute comprise Boston Children's research
    community. Founded as a 20-bed hospital for children,
    Boston Children's today
    is a 395-bed comprehensive center for pediatric and adolescent
    health care
    grounded in the values of excellence in patient care and sensitivity to the complex needs and diversity of children and families.
    Boston Children's also is a teaching affiliate of Harvard Medical School.

    For more information about research and clinical innovation at Boston Children's, visit: http://vectorblog.org/. CONTACT: Cyndi Lepore Boston
    Children's Hospital 617-919-3110 cynthia.lepore@childrens.harvard.edu

    SOURCE Boston Children's Hospital
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