外显子组测序
肥胖
遗传学
生物
基因
等位基因
外显子组
体质指数
生物信息学
内分泌学
突变
作者
Parsa Akbari,Ankit Gilani,Olukayode Sosina,Jack A. Kosmicki,Lori Khrimian,Yi‐Ya Fang,Trikaldarshi Persaud,Víctor García,Dylan Sun,Alexander Li,Joelle Mbatchou,Adam E. Locke,Christian Benner,Niek Verweij,Nan Lin,Sakib Hossain,Kevin Agostinucci,Jonathan V. Pascale,Ercument Dirice,Michael E. Dunn
出处
期刊:Science
[American Association for the Advancement of Science]
日期:2021-07-01
卷期号:373 (6550)
被引量:203
标识
DOI:10.1126/science.abf8683
摘要
How genes affect human obesity Obesity is linked to many human diseases, including diabetes, cancer, and heart disease. There is thus great interest in understanding how genes predispose individuals to, or protect individuals from, obesity. Akbari et al. sequenced more than 600,000 exomes from the United Kingdom, the United States, and Mexico and identified 16 rare coding variants (see the Perspective by Yeo and O'Rahilly). Some of the alleles associated with body mass index (BMI) were brain-expressed G protein–coupled receptors. One variant allele was found in Mexican populations at low frequency and was associated with lower BMI. Deletion of this gene in mice resulted in a resistance to weight gain, suggesting that this gene provides an avenue of study for the prevention or treatment of obesity. Science , abf8683, this issue p. eabf8683 ; see also abh3556, p. 30
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