Publication Type : Journal Article
Source : J Clin Endocrinol Metab
Url : https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32818236/
Campus : Faridabad
Center : Amrita Research Center Delhi
Year : 2020
Abstract :
Background: Obesity and energy expenditure (EE) are heritable and genetic variants influencing EE may contribute to the development of obesity. We sought to identify genetic variants that affect EE in American Indians, an ethnic group with high prevalence of obesity.
Methods: Whole-exome sequencing was performed in 373 healthy Pima Indians informative for 24-hour EE during energy balance. Genetic association analyses of all high-quality exonic variants (≥5 carriers) was performed, and those predicted to be damaging were prioritized.
Results: Rs752074397 introduces a premature stop codon (Cys264Ter) in DAO and demonstrated the strongest association for 24-hour EE, where the Ter allele associated with substantially lower 24-hour EE (mean lower by 268 kcal/d) and sleeping EE (by 135 kcal/d). The Ter allele has a frequency = 0.5% in Pima Indians, whereas is extremely rare in most other ethnic groups (frequency < 0.01%). In vitro functional analysis showed reduced protein levels for the truncated form of DAO consistent with increased protein degradation. DAO encodes D-amino acid oxidase, which is involved in dopamine synthesis which might explain its role in modulating EE.
Conclusion: Our results indicate that a nonsense mutation in DAO may influence EE in American Indians. Identification of variants that influence energy metabolism may lead to new pathways to treat human obesity
Cite this Research Publication : Paolo Piaggi, Çiğdem Köroğlu, Anup Nair, Jeff Sutherland, Yunhua Li Muller, Pankaj Kumar, Wen-Chi Hsueh, Sayuko Kobes, Alan Shuldiner, Hye In Kim, Nehal Gosalia, Christopher Van Hout, Marcus Jone, William Knowler, Jonathan Krakoff, Robert Hanson, Clifton Bogardus, Leslie J Baier, Exome sequencing identifies a nonsense variant in DAO associated with reduced energy expenditure in American Indians, J Clin Endocrinol Metab, 2020.