Sequencing of 640,000 exomes identifies <i>GPR75</i> variants associated with protection from obesity

Parsa Akbari(Regeneron (United States)), Ankit Gilani(New York Medical College), Olukayode Sosina(Regeneron (United States)), Jack A. Kosmicki(Regeneron (United States)), Lori Khrimian(Regeneron (United States)), Yi‐Ya Fang(Regeneron (United States)), Trikaldarshi Persaud(Regeneron (United States)), Víctor Garcia(New York Medical College), Dylan Sun(Regeneron (United States)), Alexander Li(Regeneron (United States)), Joelle Mbatchou(Regeneron (United States)), Adam E. Locke(Regeneron (United States)), Christian Benner(Regeneron (United States)), Niek Verweij(Regeneron (United States)), Nan Lin(Regeneron (United States)), Sakib Hossain(New York Medical College), Kevin Agostinucci(New York Medical College), Jonathan V. Pascale(New York Medical College), Ercument Dirice(New York Medical College), Michael E. Dunn(Regeneron (United States)), William E. Kraus(Duke University), Svati H. Shah(Duke Medical Center), Yii‐Der I. Chen(UCLA Medical Center), Jerome I. Rotter(UCLA Medical Center), Daniel J. Rader(University of Pennsylvania), Olle Melander(Malmö University), Christopher D. Still(Geisinger Health System), Tooraj Mirshahi(Geisinger Health System), David J. Carey(Geisinger Health System), Jaime Berúmen(Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México), Pablo Kuri‐Morales(Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México), Jesús Alegre-Díaz(Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México), Jason Torres(University of Oxford), Jonathan Emberson(University of Oxford), Rory Collins(University of Oxford), Suganthi Balasubramanian(Regeneron (United States)), Alicia Hawes(Regeneron (United States)), Marcus Herbert Jones(Regeneron (United States)), Brian Zambrowicz(Regeneron (United States)), Andrew Murphy(Regeneron (United States)), Charles Paulding(Regeneron (United States)), Giovanni Coppola(Regeneron (United States)), John D. Overton(Regeneron (United States)), Jeffrey G. Reid(Regeneron (United States)), Alan R. Shuldiner(Regeneron (United States)), Michael Cantor(Regeneron (United States)), Hyun Min Kang(Regeneron (United States)), Gonçalo R. Abecasis(Regeneron (United States)), Katia Karalis(Regeneron (United States)), Aris N. Economides(Regeneron (United States)), Jonathan Marchini(Regeneron (United States)), George D. Yancopoulos(Regeneron (United States)), Mark W. Sleeman(Regeneron (United States)), Judith Y. Altarejos(Regeneron (United States)), Giusy Della Gatta(Regeneron (United States)), Roberto Tapia-Conyer(Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México), Michal L. Schwartzman(New York Medical College), Aris Baras(Regeneron (United States)), Manuel A. R. Ferreira(Regeneron (United States)), Luca A. Lotta(Regeneron (United States))
Science
July 1, 2021
Cited by 272Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

How genes affect human obesity Obesity is linked to many human diseases, including diabetes, cancer, and heart disease. There is thus great interest in understanding how genes predispose individuals to, or protect individuals from, obesity. Akbari et al. sequenced more than 600,000 exomes from the United Kingdom, the United States, and Mexico and identified 16 rare coding variants (see the Perspective by Yeo and O'Rahilly). Some of the alleles associated with body mass index (BMI) were brain-expressed G protein–coupled receptors. One variant allele was found in Mexican populations at low frequency and was associated with lower BMI. Deletion of this gene in mice resulted in a resistance to weight gain, suggesting that this gene provides an avenue of study for the prevention or treatment of obesity. Science , abf8683, this issue p. eabf8683 ; see also abh3556, p. 30


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis