GNB1 and obesity: Evidence for a correlation between haploinsufficiency and syndromic obesity

Author:

Kleinendorst Lotte12ORCID,Abawi Ozair34ORCID,Vos Niels1ORCID,van der Valk Eline S.45ORCID,Maas Saskia M.1,Morgan Angela T.6ORCID,Hildebrand Michael S.67ORCID,Da Silva Jorge D.8910,Florijn Ralph J.1,Lauffer Peter1ORCID,Visser Jenny A.45ORCID,van Rossum Elisabeth F. C.45ORCID,van den Akker Erica L. T.34ORCID,van Haelst Mieke M.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Human Genetics Amsterdam Reproduction & Development Research Institute, Amsterdam UMC, University of Amsterdam Amsterdam the Netherlands

2. Emma Center for Personalized Medicine Amsterdam UMC, University of Amsterdam Amsterdam the Netherlands

3. Department of Pediatrics, Division of Endocrinology Erasmus MC‐Sophia Children's Hospital, University Medical Center Rotterdam Rotterdam the Netherlands

4. Obesity Center CGG Erasmus MC, University Medical Center Rotterdam Rotterdam the Netherlands

5. Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Endocrinology Erasmus MC, University Medical Center Rotterdam Rotterdam the Netherlands

6. Murdoch Children's Research Institute Melbourne Australia

7. Department of Medicine Austin Health, University of Melbourne Melbourne Australia

8. Centro de Genética Médica Doutor Jacinto Magalhães Centro Hospitalar Universitário do Porto & Unit for Multidisciplinary Research in Biomedicine, Abel Salazar Biomedical Sciences Institute, Porto University Porto Portugal

9. Life and Health Sciences Research Institute (ICVS), School of Medicine University of Minho Braga Portugal

10. ICVS/3B's—PT Government Associate Laboratory Braga/Guimarães Portugal

Abstract

SummaryMost patients with GNB1 encephalopathy have developmental delay and/or intellectual disability, brain anomalies and seizures. Recently, two cases with GNB1 encephalopathy caused by haploinsufficiency have been reported that also show a Prader–Willi‐like phenotype of childhood hypotonia and severe obesity. Here we present three new cases from our expert centre for genetic obesity in which GNB1 truncating and splice variants, probably leading to haploinsufficiency, were identified. They all have obesity, hyperphagia and intellectual deficit. The clinical cases and their weight courses are presented, together with a review of all 68 published cases with GNB1 encephalopathy. Information on weight was not mentioned in most of these articles, so we contacted authors for additional clinical information on weight status and hyperphagia. Of the 42 patients whose weight status we could determine, obesity was present in 8 patients (19%). Obesity is significantly over‐represented in the group with truncating and splicing variants. In this group, we see an obesity prevalence of 75%. Since GNB1 has been linked to several key genes in the hypothalamic leptin‐melanocortin pathway, which regulates satiety and energy expenditure, our data support the potential association between GNB1 haploinsufficiency and genetic obesity. We also suggest GNB1 is a candidate gene for the known obesity phenotype of the 1p36 microdeletion syndrome given this chromosomal region includes the GNB1 gene. Knowledge of an additional obesity phenotype is important for prognosis, early interventions against obesity and awareness when prescribing weight‐inducing medication.

Publisher

Wiley

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