The Trp64Arg mutation of the beta3 adrenergic receptor gene has no effect on obesity phenotypes in the Québec Family Study and Swedish Obese Subjects cohorts. — Jacques Gagnon (1996) | RDL Network
The Trp64Arg mutation of the beta3 adrenergic receptor gene has no effect on obesity phenotypes in the Québec Family Study and Swedish Obese Subjects cohorts.
Journal of Clinical Investigation 98(9): 2086-2093
Article 1996 English
Authors
JG
Jacques Gagnon
PM
Pascale Mauriège
SR
Sonia Roy
Abstract
1 min read
The beta adrenergic system plays a key role in regulating energy balance through the stimulation of both thermogenesis and lipid mobilization in brown and white adipose tissues in human and various animal models. Recent studies have suggested that a missense Trp64Arg mutation in the beta3 adrenergic receptor (ADRB3) gene was involved in obesity and insulin resistance. We have investigated the effect of this mutation on obesity-related phenotypes in two cohorts: the Québec Family Study (QFS) and the Swedish Obese Subjects (SOS). In QFS, no association was found between this mutation and body mass index (BMI), body fat including abdominal visceral fat, resting metabolic rate, various diabetes and cardiovascular risk factors, and changes in body weight and body fat over a 12-yr period. With the exception of RMR (P = 0.04), no evidence of linkage was detected between the mutation and phenotypes of QFS based on sib-pair data. In SOS, the frequency of the Trp64Arg allele was not significantly different between nonobese and obese female subjects and no association was found between the mutation and body weight gain over time. These findings do not support the view that there is an association between the Trp64Arg mutation in the ADRB3 gene and obesity.
Christian-Marc Lanouette, Jean‐Paul Giacobino, Louis Pérusse, Michel Lacaille, Cédric Yvon, Marie‐Christine Chagnon, Françoise Kühne, Claude Bouchard, Patrick Muzzin, Yvon C. Chagnon
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Peter Jacobson, Olavi Ukkola, Tuomo Rankinen, Eric E. Snyder, Arthur S. Leon, D. C. Rao, James S. Skinner, Jack H. Wilmore, Lars Lönn, George S. M. Cowan, Lars Sjöström, Claude Bouchard
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism
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