The CIDEA Gene V115F Polymorphism Is Associated With Obesity in Swedish Subjects

I Dahlman, M Kaaman, H Jiao, J Kere, M Laakso… - Diabetes, 2005 - Am Diabetes Assoc
I Dahlman, M Kaaman, H Jiao, J Kere, M Laakso, P Arner
Diabetes, 2005Am Diabetes Assoc
The cell death–inducing DFFA (DNA fragmentation factor-α)-like effector A (CIDEA) gene is
implicated as an important regulator of body weight in mice and humans and is therefore a
candidate gene for human obesity. Here, we characterize common CIDEA gene
polymorphisms and investigate them for association with obesity in two independent
Swedish samples; the first comprised 981 women and the second 582 men. Both samples
display a large variation in BMI. The only detected coding polymorphism encodes an exon 4 …
The cell death–inducing DFFA (DNA fragmentation factor-α)-like effector A (CIDEA) gene is implicated as an important regulator of body weight in mice and humans and is therefore a candidate gene for human obesity. Here, we characterize common CIDEA gene polymorphisms and investigate them for association with obesity in two independent Swedish samples; the first comprised 981 women and the second 582 men. Both samples display a large variation in BMI. The only detected coding polymorphism encodes an exon 4 V115F amino acid substitution, which is associated with BMI in both sexes (P = 0.021 for women, P = 0.023 for men, and P = 0.0015 for joint analysis). These results support a role for CIDEA alleles in human obesity. CIDEA-deficient mice display higher metabolic rate, and the gene cross-talks with tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) in fat cells. We hypothesize that CIDEA alleles regulate human obesity through impact on basal metabolic rate and adipocyte TNF-α signaling.
Am Diabetes Assoc