Congenital leptin deficiency is associated with severe early-onset obesity in humans

Adult Leptin Male 0301 basic medicine Molecular Sequence Data Mice, Obese CHO Cells Consanguinity Mice 03 medical and health sciences Messenger-Rna Cricetinae Animals Humans Obesity Age of Onset Child Frameshift Mutation 2. Zero hunger Protein Homozygote Child, Preschool Body Composition Female Gene-Product Ob Rna Metabolism, Inborn Errors
DOI: 10.1038/43185 Publication Date: 2002-07-26T08:35:11Z
ABSTRACT
The extreme obesity of the obese (ob/ob) mouse is attributable to mutations in the gene encoding leptin, an adipocyte-specific secreted protein which has profound effects on appetite and energy expenditure. We know of no equivalent evidence regarding leptin's role in the control of fat mass in humans. We have examined two severely obese children who are members of the same highly consanguineous pedigree. Their serum leptin levels were very low despite their markedly elevated fat mass and, in both, a homozygous frame-shift mutation involving the deletion of a single guanine nucleotide in codon 133 of the gene for leptin was found. The severe obesity found in these congenitally leptin-deficient subjects provides the first genetic evidence that leptin is an important regulator of energy balance in humans.
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