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Publication : Obesity genes: beneficial effects in heterozygous mice.

First Author  Coleman DL Year  1979
Journal  Science Volume  203
Issue  4381 Pages  663-5
PubMed ID  760211 Mgi Jnum  J:6081
Mgi Id  MGI:54558 Doi  10.1126/science.760211
Citation  Coleman DL (1979) Obesity genes: beneficial effects in heterozygous mice. Science 203(4381):663-5
abstractText  The mouse mutant genes obese (ob) and diabetes (db) cause similar obesity-diabetes states in homozygotes. These obesity syndromes are characterized by a more efficient conversion of food to lipid and, once stored, a slower rate of catabolism on fasting. Heterozygous mice, either ob/+ or db/+, survived a prolonged fast significantly longer than normal homozygotes (+/+); this suggests that the heterozygotes exhibited increased metabolic efficiency, a feature normally associated with both homozygous mutants. The existence of this thriftiness trait, if manifested by heterozygous carriers in wild populations, would lend credence to the thrifty gene concept of diabetes. Beneficial effects of normally deleterious genes may have played a role in the development of diabetes-susceptible human populations, as well as having provided the survival advantage that has allowed both the development and successful establishment of species in desert and other less affluent regions.
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