Genome-wide search for genes related to the fat-free body mass in the Québec family study
Metabolism 49(2): 203-207
Article 2000 English
Authors
MC
Marie‐Christine Chagnon
IB
Ingrid B. Borecki
LP
Louis Pérusse
Abstract
1 min read
Fat-free mass (FFM) consists mostly of skeletal muscle and bone tissues, and identification of the genes and molecular mechanisms involved in the control of FFM would have implications for the understanding of sarcopenia and potentially osteoporesis associated with aging, as well as the response to starvation, refeeding, anorexia, and any other conditions in which lean body mass is important. A genome-wide search for genes related to body leanness has been completed in the Québec Family Study (QFS). Microsatellite markers (N = 292) from the autosomal chromosomes were typed. The mean spacing of the markers was 11.9 centimorgans (cM) (range, <0.1 to 41). FFM was calculated from percent body fat, derived from underwater weighing, and body weight and was adjusted by regression for age and sex effects before analysis. A maximum of 336 sib paris or 609 pairs of extended relatives were analyzed using single-point Haseman-Elston regression (SIBPAL and RELPAL) and multipoint variance component (SEGPATH) linkage analyses. Significant linkages were observed on chromosomes 15q25-q25 for5 a CA repeat within the insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor (IGF1R) gene (Lod score = 3.56) and at 18q12 with D18S877 (Lod score = 3.53) and D18S535 (Lod score = 3.58), 2 makers located 10 cM apart. A moderately significant linkage was also observed on chromosome 7p15.3 with the marker D7S1808 (Load score = 2.72). The most obvious candidate genes within the regions identified by these linkages include the IGF1R on 15q and neuropeptide Y (NPY) and growth hormone—releasing hormone (GHRH) receptor on 7p. On 18q, the melanocortin receptor 4 (MC4R) is not likely the candidate gene for the observed linkage. This study represents the first genome-wide search for genes that may be involved in the regulation of the lean component of body mass in humans.
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