| Literature DB >> 10712433 |
S Yu1, O Gavrilova, H Chen, R Lee, J Liu, K Pacak, A F Parlow, M J Quon, M L Reitman, L S Weinstein.
Abstract
Heterozygous disruption of Gnas, the gene encoding the stimulatory G-protein alpha subunit (G(s)alpha), leads to distinct phenotypes depending on whether the maternal (m-/+) or paternal (+/p-) allele is disrupted. G(s)alpha is imprinted, with the maternal allele preferentially expressed in adipose tissue. Hence, expression is decreased in m-/+ mice but normal in +/p- mice. M-/+ mice become obese, with increased lipid per cell in white and brown adipose tissue, whereas +/p- mice are thin, with decreased lipid in adipose tissue. These effects are not due to abnormalities in thyroid hormone status, food intake, or leptin secretion. +/p- mice are hypermetabolic at both ambient temperature (21 degrees C) and thermoneutrality (30 degrees C). In contrast, m-/+ mice are hypometabolic at ambient temperature and eumetabolic at thermoneutrality M-/+ and wild-type mice have similar dose-response curves for metabolic response to a beta(3)-adrenergic agonist, CL316243, indicating normal sensitivity of adipose tissue to sympathetic stimulation. Measurement of urinary catecholamines suggests that +/p- and m-/+ mice have increased and decreased activation of the sympathetic nervous system, respectively. This is to our knowledge the first animal model in which a single genetic defect leads to opposite effects on energy metabolism depending on parental inheritance. This probably results from deficiency of maternal- and paternal-specific Gnas gene products, respectively.Entities:
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Year: 2000 PMID: 10712433 PMCID: PMC289181 DOI: 10.1172/JCI8437
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Invest ISSN: 0021-9738 Impact factor: 14.808