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Association of single-nucleotide polymorphisms in MTMR9 gene with obesity

Authors :
Yoshio Nakata
Yusuke Nakamura
Aritoshi Iida
Shigeru Miyazaki
Toshiie Sakata
Hironobu Yoshimatsu
Seika Kamohara
Kiyoji Tanaka
Toshiaki Hanafusa
Ryoya Komatsu
Hiroaki Masuzaki
Kikuko Hotta
Atsushi Tanabe
Kentaro Yamada
Atsushi Nakajima
Kazuyuki Hamaguchi
Shinichi Oikawa
Atsushi Takahashi
Naoto Itoh
Susumu Saito
Yuji Matsuzawa
Masato Yoneda
Kazuaki Kotani
Akihiro Sekine
Katsuto Tokunaga
Ikuo Mineo
Naoyuki Kamatani
Manabu Kawamoto
Takahiro Yanagiya
Tohru Funahashi
Kazuwa Nakao
Tatsuhiko Tsunoda
Jun Wada
Source :
Human molecular genetics. 16(24)
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

Genetic factors are clearly involved in the development of obesity, but the genetic background of obesity remains largely unclear. Starting from 62 663 gene-based single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in three sequential case-control association studies, we identified a replicated association between the obesity phenotype (BMI > or =30 kg/m(2)) and a SNP (rs2293855) located in the myotublarin-related protein 9 (MTMR9) gene in the chromosomal segment 8p23-p22. P-values (minor allele dominant model) of the first set (93 cases versus 649 controls) and the second set (564 cases versus 562 controls) were 0.008 and 0.0002, respectively. The association was replicated in the third set [394 cases versus 958 controls, P = 0.005, odds ratio (95% CI) =1.40 (1.11-1.78)]. The global P-value was 0.0000005. A multiple regression analysis revealed that gender, age BMI and rs2293855 genotype (minor allele dominant model) were significantly associated with both systolic and diastolic blood pressures. MTMR9 was shown to be the only gene within the haplotype block that contained SNPs associated with obesity. Both the transcript and protein of MTMR9 were detected in the rodent lateral hypothalamic area as well as in the arcuate nucleus, and the protein co-existed with orexin, melanin concentrating hormone, neuropeptide Y and proopiomelanocortin. The levels of MTMR9 transcript in the murine hypothalamic region increased after fasting and were decreased by a high-fat diet. Our data suggested that genetic variations in MTMR9 may confer a predisposition towards obesity and hypertension through regulation of hypothalamic neuropeptides.

Details

ISSN :
09646906
Volume :
16
Issue :
24
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Human molecular genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f1617fc927488f67762fd8f32c34e7e0