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A Mouse Model for the Metabolic Effects of the Human Fat Mass and Obesity Associated FTO Gene

Human FTO gene variants are associated with body mass index and type 2 diabetes. Because the obesity-associated SNPs are intronic, it is unclear whether changes in FTO expression or splicing are the cause of obesity or if regulatory elements within intron 1 influence upstream or downstream genes. We...

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Autores principales: Church, Chris, Lee, Sheena, Bagg, Eleanor A. L., McTaggart, James S., Deacon, Robert, Gerken, Thomas, Lee, Angela, Moir, Lee, Mecinović, Jasmin, Quwailid, Mohamed M., Schofield, Christopher J., Ashcroft, Frances M., Cox, Roger D.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2719869/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19680540
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1000599
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author Church, Chris
Lee, Sheena
Bagg, Eleanor A. L.
McTaggart, James S.
Deacon, Robert
Gerken, Thomas
Lee, Angela
Moir, Lee
Mecinović, Jasmin
Quwailid, Mohamed M.
Schofield, Christopher J.
Ashcroft, Frances M.
Cox, Roger D.
author_facet Church, Chris
Lee, Sheena
Bagg, Eleanor A. L.
McTaggart, James S.
Deacon, Robert
Gerken, Thomas
Lee, Angela
Moir, Lee
Mecinović, Jasmin
Quwailid, Mohamed M.
Schofield, Christopher J.
Ashcroft, Frances M.
Cox, Roger D.
author_sort Church, Chris
collection PubMed
description Human FTO gene variants are associated with body mass index and type 2 diabetes. Because the obesity-associated SNPs are intronic, it is unclear whether changes in FTO expression or splicing are the cause of obesity or if regulatory elements within intron 1 influence upstream or downstream genes. We tested the idea that FTO itself is involved in obesity. We show that a dominant point mutation in the mouse Fto gene results in reduced fat mass, increased energy expenditure, and unchanged physical activity. Exposure to a high-fat diet enhances lean mass and lowers fat mass relative to control mice. Biochemical studies suggest the mutation occurs in a structurally novel domain and modifies FTO function, possibly by altering its dimerisation state. Gene expression profiling revealed increased expression of some fat and carbohydrate metabolism genes and an improved inflammatory profile in white adipose tissue of mutant mice. These data provide direct functional evidence that FTO is a causal gene underlying obesity. Compared to the reported mouse FTO knockout, our model more accurately reflects the effect of human FTO variants; we observe a heterozygous as well as homozygous phenotype, a smaller difference in weight and adiposity, and our mice do not show perinatal lethality or an age-related reduction in size and length. Our model suggests that a search for human coding mutations in FTO may be informative and that inhibition of FTO activity is a possible target for the treatment of morbid obesity.
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spelling pubmed-27198692009-08-14 A Mouse Model for the Metabolic Effects of the Human Fat Mass and Obesity Associated FTO Gene Church, Chris Lee, Sheena Bagg, Eleanor A. L. McTaggart, James S. Deacon, Robert Gerken, Thomas Lee, Angela Moir, Lee Mecinović, Jasmin Quwailid, Mohamed M. Schofield, Christopher J. Ashcroft, Frances M. Cox, Roger D. PLoS Genet Research Article Human FTO gene variants are associated with body mass index and type 2 diabetes. Because the obesity-associated SNPs are intronic, it is unclear whether changes in FTO expression or splicing are the cause of obesity or if regulatory elements within intron 1 influence upstream or downstream genes. We tested the idea that FTO itself is involved in obesity. We show that a dominant point mutation in the mouse Fto gene results in reduced fat mass, increased energy expenditure, and unchanged physical activity. Exposure to a high-fat diet enhances lean mass and lowers fat mass relative to control mice. Biochemical studies suggest the mutation occurs in a structurally novel domain and modifies FTO function, possibly by altering its dimerisation state. Gene expression profiling revealed increased expression of some fat and carbohydrate metabolism genes and an improved inflammatory profile in white adipose tissue of mutant mice. These data provide direct functional evidence that FTO is a causal gene underlying obesity. Compared to the reported mouse FTO knockout, our model more accurately reflects the effect of human FTO variants; we observe a heterozygous as well as homozygous phenotype, a smaller difference in weight and adiposity, and our mice do not show perinatal lethality or an age-related reduction in size and length. Our model suggests that a search for human coding mutations in FTO may be informative and that inhibition of FTO activity is a possible target for the treatment of morbid obesity. Public Library of Science 2009-08-14 /pmc/articles/PMC2719869/ /pubmed/19680540 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1000599 Text en Church et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Church, Chris
Lee, Sheena
Bagg, Eleanor A. L.
McTaggart, James S.
Deacon, Robert
Gerken, Thomas
Lee, Angela
Moir, Lee
Mecinović, Jasmin
Quwailid, Mohamed M.
Schofield, Christopher J.
Ashcroft, Frances M.
Cox, Roger D.
A Mouse Model for the Metabolic Effects of the Human Fat Mass and Obesity Associated FTO Gene
title A Mouse Model for the Metabolic Effects of the Human Fat Mass and Obesity Associated FTO Gene
title_full A Mouse Model for the Metabolic Effects of the Human Fat Mass and Obesity Associated FTO Gene
title_fullStr A Mouse Model for the Metabolic Effects of the Human Fat Mass and Obesity Associated FTO Gene
title_full_unstemmed A Mouse Model for the Metabolic Effects of the Human Fat Mass and Obesity Associated FTO Gene
title_short A Mouse Model for the Metabolic Effects of the Human Fat Mass and Obesity Associated FTO Gene
title_sort mouse model for the metabolic effects of the human fat mass and obesity associated fto gene
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2719869/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19680540
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1000599
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