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Obesity research 1999-Nov

Sequence variants in the human cocaine and amphetamine-regulated transcript (CART) gene in subjects with early onset obesity.

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S M Echwald
T I Sørensen
T Andersen
C Hansen
N Tommerup
O Pedersen

Keywords

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

The cocaine and amphetamine-regulated transcript (CART) is expressed in the brain of rodents and humans, and intracerebroventricular injection of the peptide in rats reduces food intake. The objective of the present study was to chromosomally map the CART gene and to examine the coding region of the gene for variability in obese subjects.

METHODS

The coding region of the CART gene was analyzed by single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis in 84 subjects with early onset obesity. The prevalence of identified mutations was estimated in a cohort of 757 subjects with juvenile onset obesity [body mass index (BMI) = 35.7+/-5.7 kg/m2+/-standard deviation (S)] and in 890 random control subjects (BMI = 26.1+/-3.6 kg/m2+/-S). Furthermore, using radiation hybrid mapping we mapped the chromosomal localization of the human CART gene.

RESULTS

Radiation hybrid mapping co-localized the CART gene with a recently published human obesity locus at chromosome 5q13-14 corresponding also to an obesity locus at the similar syntenic region in mice. We identified two silent polymorphisms in the 3'UTR region of the gene (position 1457 deletion of A and position 1475 A-->G substitution) and the prevalence of these was determined among obese and control subjects. However, none of the variants were associated with either obesity or weight gain during an average follow-up period of 27.4+/-8.4 years (S).

CONCLUSIONS

Mutations in the coding region of the CART gene are unlikely to be involved in body weight control in Danish Caucasians with early onset obesity.

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