作者
Michael Orthofer,Armand Valsesia,Reedik Mägi,Qiao‐Ping Wang,Joanna Kaczanowska,I. Kozieradzki,Alexandra Leopoldi,Domagoj Cikes,Lydia M. Zopf,Evgenii O. Tretiakov,Egon Demetz,Richard Hilbe,Anna Boehm,Melita Ticevic,Margit Nõukas,Alexander Jaïs,Katrin Spirk,Teleri Clark,Sabine Amann,Maarja Lepamets,Christoph Neumayr,Cosmas D. Arnold,Zhengchao Dou,Volker Kühn,Maria Novatchkova,Shane J. F. Cronin,Uwe J.F. Tietge,Simone Müller,J. Andrew Pospisilik,Vanja Nagy,Chi‐chung Hui,Jelena Lazović,Harald Esterbauer,Astrid Hagelkrüys,Ivan Tancevski,Florian W. Kiefer,Tibor Harkany,Wulf Haubensak,G. Gregory Neely,Andres Metspalu,Jörg Hager,Nele Gheldof,Josef Penninger
摘要
There is considerable inter-individual variability in susceptibility to weight gain despite an equally obesogenic environment in large parts of the world. Whereas many studies have focused on identifying the genetic susceptibility to obesity, we performed a GWAS on metabolically healthy thin individuals (lowest 6th percentile of the population-wide BMI spectrum) in a uniquely phenotyped Estonian cohort. We discovered anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) as a candidate thinness gene. In Drosophila, RNAi mediated knockdown of Alk led to decreased triglyceride levels. In mice, genetic deletion of Alk resulted in thin animals with marked resistance to diet- and leptin-mutation-induced obesity. Mechanistically, we found that ALK expression in hypothalamic neurons controls energy expenditure via sympathetic control of adipose tissue lipolysis. Our genetic and mechanistic experiments identify ALK as a thinness gene, which is involved in the resistance to weight gain.