| Literature DB >> 28130309 |
Ruixin Liu1, Yaoyu Zou1,2, Jie Hong1, Min Cao1, Bin Cui1,2, Huiwen Zhang3, Maopei Chen1, Juan Shi1, Tinglu Ning1,2, Shaoqian Zhao1, Wen Liu1, Hui Xiong4, Cuijie Wei4, Zhengqing Qiu5, Weiqiong Gu1, Yifei Zhang1, Wanyu Li1, Lin Miao1, Yingkai Sun1, Minglan Yang1, Rui Wang1, Qinyun Ma1, Min Xu1, Yu Xu1, Tiange Wang1, Kei-Hang Katie Chan6, Xianbo Zuo7, Haoyan Chen8, Lu Qi9, Shenghan Lai10, Shumin Duan11, Baoliang Song12, Yufang Bi1, Simin Liu13, Weiqing Wang14, Guang Ning14,2, Jiqiu Wang14.
Abstract
Some Shanghai Clinical Center f a role of Niemann-Pick type C1 (NPC1) for obesity traits. However, whether the loss-of-function mutations in NPC1 cause adiposity in humans remains unknown. We recruited 25 probands with rare autosomal-recessive Niemann-Pick type C (NP-C) disease and their parents in assessment of the effect of heterozygous NPC1 mutations on adiposity. We found that male NPC1+/- carriers had a significantly higher BMI than matched control subjects or the whole population-based control subjects. Consistently, male NPC1+/- mice had increased fat storage while eating a high-fat diet. We further conducted an in-depth assessment of rare variants in the NPC1 gene in young, severely obese subjects and lean control subjects and identified 17 rare nonsynonymous/frameshift variants in NPC1 (minor allele frequency <1%) that were significantly associated with an increased risk of obesity (3.40% vs. 0.73%, respectively, in obese patients and control subjects, P = 0.0008, odds ratio = 4.8, 95% CI 1.7-13.2), indicating that rare NPC1 variants were enriched in young, morbidly obese Chinese subjects. Importantly, participants carrying rare variants with severely damaged cholesterol-transporting ability had more fat accumulation than those with mild/no damage rare variants. In summary, rare loss-of-function NPC1 mutations were identified as being associated with human adiposity with a high penetrance, providing potential therapeutic interventions for obesity in addition to the role of NPC1 in the familial NP-C disease.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28130309 DOI: 10.2337/db16-0877
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes ISSN: 0012-1797 Impact factor: 9.461