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A single-base mutation in the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma4 promoter associated with altered in vitro expression and partial lipodystrophy.
Publication year
2004Source
Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, 89, 11, (2004), pp. 5655-60ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
Human Genetics
Endocrinology
Internal Medicine
Journal title
Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism
Volume
vol. 89
Issue
iss. 11
Page start
p. 5655
Page end
p. 60
Subject
UMCN 2.2: Vascular medicine and diabetes; UMCN 5.1: Genetic defects of metabolism; UMCN 5.2: Endocrinology and reproductionAbstract
Familial partial lipodystrophy (FPLD) results from coding sequence mutations either in LMNA, encoding nuclear lamin A/C, or in PPARG, encoding peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARgamma). The LMNA form is called FPLD2 (MIM 151660), and the PPARG form is called FPLD3 (MIM 604367). We now report a 21-yr-old female with FPLD and no coding sequence mutations in either LMNA or PPARG. She was heterozygous for a novel A>G mutation at position -14 of intron B upstream of PPARG exon 1 within the promoter of the PPARgamma4 isoform. Her less severely affected father, who had features of the metabolic syndrome and a paucity of limb and gluteal fat, was also heterozygous for -14A>G. This mutation was absent among 600 alleles from normal Caucasians. A minimal promoter sequence bearing the mutation had significantly reduced promoter activity when used to drive reporter expression in in vitro expression in two cell lines, compared with the wild-type sequence. This is the first report of a human mutation in the promoter of a PPARgamma isoform. Because the mutation affects PPARgamma4 expression and is associated with FPLD, this implies that PPARgamma4 might be important for fat depot distribution and metabolism in vivo.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [245104]
- Electronic publications [132391]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [93207]
- Open Access publications [106009]
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