Point mutations in the melanocortin-4 receptor cause variable obesity in mice.
Meehan. Thomas P TP; Tabeta. Koichi K; Du. Xin X; Woodward. Lanette S LS; Firozi. Karen K; Beutler. Bruce B; Justice. Monica J MJ
Key Findings
- MC4R mutations cause obesity in mice by affecting appetite and energy use
- The Fatboy (I194T) mutation reduces receptor surface levels and needs more alpha‑MSH to work
- The Southbeach (L300P) mutation reaches the cell surface but barely signals, leading to greater obesity
Practical Outcomes
- If your MC4R isn’t working well, melanotan‑I or similar peptides may have limited effect on weight control. Genetic differences in MC4R could explain why some people respond differently to appetite‑suppressing peptides. Testing MC4R function or variants might help personalize peptide use for weight management.
Summary
Scientists found that two different mutations in the mouse MC4R gene, which is linked to obesity, change how the receptor works. One mutation makes the receptor harder to reach on the cell surface, while the other lets it get to the surface but stops it from signaling properly. Mice with the weaker‑signaling mutation got fatter, showing that how much the receptor still works predicts obesity severity.
Abstract
Mutations in the melanocortin-4 receptor (MC4R) are associated with early-onset obesity in humans. Furthermore, a null Mc4r allele in mice leads to severe obesity due to hyperphagia and decreased energy expenditure. As part of independent N-ethyl- N-nitrosourea (ENU) mutagenesis screens, two obesity mutants, Fatboy and Southbeach, were isolated. Mapping revealed linkage to the melanocortin-4 receptor (Mc4r) and sequencing found single amino acid changes in Mc4r for each line. Expression of the mutant receptors in HEK 293 cells revealed defects in receptor signaling. The mutated Fatboy receptor (I194T) shows an increase in the effective concentration necessary for 50% of maximal signaling (EC(50)) when stimulated with alpha-MSH. Based on competitive binding, I194T is expressed on the cell surface at lower levels than the nonmutated receptor. In contrast, Southbeach (L300P) displays minimal receptor signaling when stimulated with the natural ligand alpha-MSH or the synthetic agonist NDP-alpha-MSH. Cell surface binding is absent, which usually indicates a lack of cell surface expression. However, antibody binding to Flag-tagged receptors by flow cytometry analysis and immunofluorescence demonstrates that L300P is translocated to the plasma membrane at a level comparable to the wild-type receptor. These results indicate a correlation with remaining receptor activity and the severity of the obesity in the mice homozygous for the mutations. Southbeach has less receptor activity and becomes more obese. These mutants will serve as good models for the variability in phenotype in humans carrying mutations in the MC4R gene.
Study Information
pubmed
2006
2006-12-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1007/s00335-006-0073-z
22
25