Genes induce human obesity.In recent years, studies of abnormally hefty rodents have revealed several genetic mutations Noun 1. genetic mutation - (genetics) any event that changes genetic structure; any alteration in the inherited nucleic acid sequence of the genotype of an organism chromosomal mutation, mutation that induce obesity. Scientists have now found similar mutations in people, although they stress that such genetic flaws are rare. In the June 26 Nature, Stephen O'Rahilly of the University of Cambridge in England and his colleagues describe an 8-year-old girl and a 2-year-old boy, cousins and both dangerously obese, who have mutations in the gene for the hormone leptin Leptin A protein hormone that affects feeding behavior and hunger in humans. At present it is thought that obesity in humans may result in part from insensitivity to leptin. . Leptin, secreted by fat cells, is thought to govern body weight by sending signals to the brain (SN: 7/29/95, p. 68). Since finding that mice with mutations in their leptin gene become obese, scientists had unsuccessfully searched thousands of people for similar mutations. In the July Nature Genetics, O'Rahilly's group describes a second obesity-inducing human mutation. They analyzed a woman who had been dangerously obese during her childhood but who has since controlled her weight through dieting. She has a mutant gene mutant gene n. A gene that has lost, gained, or exchanged some of the material it received from its parent, resulting in a permanent transmissible change in its function. for prohormone convertase 1, an enzyme that activates certain proteins, including insulin, as the final step in their production. A similar enzyme is mutated in some obese mice, though how such enzymes influence body weight remains unclear (SN: 6/3/95, p. 341). "These observations are important not because the etiology of most human obesity has been elucidated--it has not--but because they vindicate an approach to this complex phenotype phenotype (fē`nətīp'): see genetics. phenotype All the observable characteristics of an organism, such as shape, size, colour, and behaviour, that result from the interaction of its genotype (total genetic makeup) with that emphasizes biology over `will power' and regards body weight as the result of complex interactions between genes and environment rather than a psychological aberration of free will," comments Rudolph L. Leibel of Rockefeller University Rockefeller University, philanthropic organization in New York City, founded 1901 as the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research by John D. Rockefeller for furthering medical science and its allied subjects and to make knowledge of these subjects available to the in New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of in the same issue of Nature Genetics. |
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