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Allele Is Reversed by Paternal Deletion of the Gs
Imprint Control RegionMetabolic Diseases Branch (T.X., M.C., J.L., L.S.W.) and Mouse Metabolism Core Laboratory (O.G.), National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, and Reproductive and Adult Endocrinology Program (E.W.L.), National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892
Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Lee S. Weinstein, M.D., Metabolic Diseases Branch, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases/National Institutes of Health, Building 10, Room 8C101, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-1752. E-mail: leew{at}amb.niddk.nih.gov.
The G protein
-subunit Gs
mediates receptor-stimulated cAMP production and is imprinted with reduced expression from the paternal allele in specific tissues. Disruption of the Gs
maternal (but not paternal) allele leads to severe obesity, hypertriglyceridemia, and insulin resistance in mice and obesity in patients with Albright hereditary osteodystrophy. Paternal deletion of a Gs
imprint control region (1A) leads to loss of tissue-specific Gs
imprinting. To determine whether the metabolic abnormalities resulting from disruption of the Gs
maternal allele could be reversed by loss of paternal Gs
imprinting, females with a heterozygous Gs
exon 1 deletion were mated to males with heterozygous deletion of the imprint control region (1A) to generate mice with maternal Gs
deletion (E1m–), paternal 1A deletion (1Ap–), double mutants (E1m–:1Ap–), and wild type. E1m– mice developed obesity, glucose intolerance, insulin resistance, and hypertriglyceridemia, which were all normalized by the paternal 1A deletion in E1m–:1Ap– mice. Obesity in E1m– was associated with reduced energy expenditure and sympathetic nerve activity, and these were also normalized in E1m–:1Ap– mice. 1Ap– mice had reduced body weight associated with proportional decreases in fat and lean mass as well as increased activity levels. The metabolic phenotype resulting from maternal Gs
deletion is rescued by a genetic lesion that leads to loss of tissue-specific Gs
imprinting, consistent with this phenotype being a direct consequence of Gs
imprinting in one or more specific tissues.
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