Recessive deficiency of proopiomelanocortin (POMC) causes childhood-onset severe obesity. Cases can now benefit from the melanocortin 4 receptor agonist setmelanotide. Furthermore, a phase 3 clinical Show more
Recessive deficiency of proopiomelanocortin (POMC) causes childhood-onset severe obesity. Cases can now benefit from the melanocortin 4 receptor agonist setmelanotide. Furthermore, a phase 3 clinical trial is evaluating setmelanotide in heterozygotes for POMC. We performed a large-scale genetic analysis to assess the effect of heterozygous, pathogenic POMC variants on obesity. A genetic analysis was performed in a family including 2 cousins with childhood-onset obesity. We analyzed the obesity status of heterozygotes for pathogenic POMC variants in the Human Gene Mutation Database. The association between heterozygous pathogenic POMC variants and obesity risk was assessed using 190,000 exome samples from UK Biobank. The 2 cousins carried a compound heterozygous pathogenic variant in POMC. Six siblings were heterozygotes; only 1 of them had obesity. In Human Gene Mutation Database, we identified 60 heterozygotes for pathogenic POMC variants, of whom 14 had obesity. In UK Biobank, heterozygous pathogenic POMC variants were not associated with obesity risk, but they modestly increased body mass index levels. Heterozygous pathogenic POMC variants do not contribute to monogenic obesity, but they slightly increase body mass index. Setmelanotide use in patients with obesity, which would only be based on the presence of a heterozygous POMC variant, can be questioned. Show less
Dyggve-Melchior-Clausen syndrome (DMC) is a rare autosomal-recessive disorder, the gene for which maps to chromosome 18q21.1. DMC is characterized by the association of a spondylo-epi-metaphyseal dysp Show more
Dyggve-Melchior-Clausen syndrome (DMC) is a rare autosomal-recessive disorder, the gene for which maps to chromosome 18q21.1. DMC is characterized by the association of a spondylo-epi-metaphyseal dysplasia and mental retardation. Electron microscopic study of cutaneous cells of an affected child showed dilated rough endoplasmic reticulum, enlarged and aberrant vacuoles and numerous vesicles. As the etiology of the disorder is unknown, we have used a positional cloning strategy to identify the DMC gene. We detected seven deleterious mutations within a gene predicted from a human transcript (FLJ20071) in 10 DMC families. The mutations were nonsense mutations (R194X, R204X, L219X, Q483X), splice site or frameshift mutations (K626N+92aa to stop). The DMC gene transcript is widely distributed but appears abundant in chondrocytes and fetal brain. The predicted protein product of the DMC gene yields little insight into its likely function, showing no significant homology to any known protein family. However, the carboxy terminal end comprises a cluster of dileucine motifs, highly conserved across species. We conclude that DMC syndrome is consequent upon loss of function of a gene that we propose to name Dymeclin, which may have a role in process of intracellular digestion of proteins. Show less