Mouse model implicates GNB3 duplication in a childhood obesity syndrome

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Abstract

Obesity is a highly heritable condition and a risk factor for other diseases, including type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, hypertension, and cancer. Recently, genomic copy number variation (CNV) has been implicated in cases of early onset obesity that may be comorbid with intellectual disability. Here, we describe a recurrent CNV that causes a syndrome associated with intellectual disability, seizures, macrocephaly, and obesity. This unbalanced chromosome translocation leads to duplication of over 100 genes on chromosome 12, including the obesity candidate gene G protein β3 (GNB3). We generated a transgenic mouse model that carries an extra copy of GNB3, weighs significantly more than its wild-type littermates, and has excess intraabdominal fat accumulation. GNB3 is highly expressed in the brain, consistent with G-protein signaling involved in satiety and/or metabolism. These functional data connect GNB3 duplication and overexpression to elevated body mass index and provide evidence for a genetic syndrome caused by a recurrent CNV.

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Goldlust, I. S., Hermetz, K. E., Catalano, L. M., Barfield, R. T., Cozad, R., Wynn, G., … Rudd, M. K. (2013). Mouse model implicates GNB3 duplication in a childhood obesity syndrome. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 110(37), 14990–14994. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1305999110

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