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Increased body fat in mice with a targeted mutation of the paternally expressed imprinted gene <i>Peg3</i>
123
Citations
33
References
2005
Year
NutritionGeneticsFood IntakeLower Food IntakeEpigeneticsObesityMetabolic SyndromeTranscriptional RegulationBody CompositionMolecular NutritionBody FatLeptin ResistanceHealth SciencesEnergy HomeostasisTargeted MutationDevelopmental EndocrinologyEndocrinologyGene ExpressionEpigenetic RegulationGene FunctionDevelopmental BiologyPhysiologyGenetic MechanismMetabolic RegulationMetabolismMedicine
Peg3 encodes a C2H2 type zinc finger protein that is implicated in a novel physiological pathway regulating core body temperature, feeding behavior, and obesity in mice. Peg3+/- mutant mice develop an excess of abdominal, subcutaneous, and intra-scapular fat, despite a lifetime of lower food intake than wild-type animals. However, they start life with reduced fat reserves and are slower to enter puberty. These mice maintain a lower core body temperature, fail to respond to a cold challenge, and have lower metabolic activity as measured by oxygen consumption. Plasma leptin levels are significantly higher than in wild types, and Peg3+/- mice appear to have developed leptin resistance. Administration of exogenous leptin resulted in a significant reduction in food intake in wild-type mice that was not observed in Peg3+/- mutants. This mutation, which is strongly expressed in hypothalamic tissue during development, has the capacity to regulate multiple events relating to energy homeostasis.
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