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Loss or gain of genetic material: a weighty issue

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31
Aug
Wed, 31/08/2011 - 19:01

Loss or gain of genetic material: a weighty issue

PRESS RELEASE
LOSS OR GAIN OF GENETIC MATERIAL: A WEIGHTY ISSUE
Researchers at the Centre for Genomic Regulation, in a collaborative study with more than 100 research centres worldwide, have contributed to the identification of a region of the genome with opposing effects with regard to body weight.
The study will be published on 1st September, 2011, in the prestigious scientific journal Nature.
Researchers Xavier Estivill, Mónica Gratacós and Sergi Villatoro, from the Genes and Disease programme of the Centre for Genomic Regulation (CRG) in Barcelona, have taken part in a scientific study identifying an area of the genome having opposing effects with respect to body weight.
The study, to be published on 1st September in the journal Nature, involved more than 100 research centres worldwide, five of which are Spanish, and included more than 95,000 individuals with intellectual or developmental disability and psychiatric disorders as well as individuals from the general populace.
The researchers identified 132 subjects with a duplication of one region of chromosome 16p11.2, among who was a high frequency of individuals with low birth weight and low body mass index, in many cases accompanied by selective and restrictive feeding behaviour. Adult carriers of the duplication, and particularly men, were 24 times more likely to be clinically underweight.
Previous studies had found that when this same region on chromosome 16p11.2 is deleted, it is associated with a 43-times greater risk of suffering morbid obesity with hyperphagia and mental retardation. The fact that opposing changes (loss or gain of genetic material) in the same region of the genome give rise to opposite phenotypes (being obese or underweight), suggests that this region may contain genes that regulate energy balance and affect feeding behaviour, being able to manifest as hyperphagia (increased intake) or anorexia (refusal to feed) depending on the number of copies of the genes that an individual has.
The CRG researchers Xavier Estivill, Mónica Gratacós and Sergi Villatoro led the genetic studies into the samples from the Spanish subjects.
Reference work: Jacquemont, S. et al., “Mirror extreme BMI phenotypes associated with gene dosage at the chromosome 16p11.2 locus”. Nature, Sept 1, 2011, doi:10.1038/nature10406
For further information: Juan Sarasua, Communication and Public Relations Dept., Centre for Genomic Regulation (CRG). Tel. +34 93 316 02 37.