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 Gene linked to obesity and diabetes - study
    July 18 2005 at 05:35PM Get IOL on your
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Washington - A gene that may regulate the body's response to insulin has been linked to both obesity and type-2 diabetes, researchers in Britain and France reported on Monday.

The discovery helps explain how being overweight is associated with type-2, or adult-onset diabetes, the researchers report in this week's issue of the journal Nature Genetics.

It may also some day offer new ways to treat the conditions, both of which are on the rapid rise across the world.

"Although this discovery is not going to lead to a 'magic pill' for curing obesity and type-2 diabetes, it could help in identifying groups and individuals at increased risk," said Philippe Froguel, who led the team at Imperial College London, Institut Pasteur de Lille in France and other institutions.
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'People who are overweight are more likely to have insulin resistance'
"If we can identify those at risk at an earlier age, it may be possible to take preventive measures earlier on, and reduce the burden of ill health caused by obesity in later life," he said.

Froguel and colleagues started with 62 families prone to both obesity and diabetes. They found a gene called ENPP1 that seemed to be similar among the families.

Then they cast their net widely across northern Europe, looking at more than 4 000 people, obese and not.

They found 11 different variations of the gene, called single nucleotide polymorphisms or SNPs. Six of these forms were linked with severe obesity.

The gene helps control how cells respond to insulin, which in turns helps them use glucose efficiently.

In people with diabetes, cells do not use insulin correctly and their blood gets filled with too much glucose.

Type-2 diabetes usually does not occur suddenly, but develops over time, beginning with a condition called insulin resistance. People who are obese or overweight are much more likely to have insulin resistance, but it is not entirely clear which comes first - the diabetes or the insulin resistance.

In the children in Froguel's study, more ENPP1 seemed to mimic the effects of insulin resistance in the brain, where insulin suppresses appetite.

So it may be that this particular form of the gene interferes with both appetite and the ability to use insulin correctly, Froguel's team suggested.

"The identification of ENPP1 as a molecular mechanism for obesity and diabetes means we may be able to use it as a target to develop new therapies and treatments, ultimately leading to more effective ways of treating diabetes," Froguel said.

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