Effects of mutations in the human uncoupling protein 3 gene on the respiratory quotient and fat oxidation in severe obesity and type 2 diabetes.

G Argyropoulos, AM Brown, SM Willi… - The Journal of …, 1998 - Am Soc Clin Investig
G Argyropoulos, AM Brown, SM Willi, J Zhu, Y He, M Reitman, SM Gevao, I Spruill…
The Journal of clinical investigation, 1998Am Soc Clin Investig
Human uncoupling protein 3 (UCP3) is a mitochondrial transmembrane carrier that
uncouples oxidative ATP phosphorylation. With the capacity to participate in thermogenesis
and energy balance, UCP3 is an important obesity candidate gene. A missense
polymorphism in exon 3 (V102I) was identified in an obese and diabetic proband. A
mutation introducing a stop codon in exon 4 (R143X) and a terminal polymorphism in the
splice donor junction of exon 6 were also identified in a compound heterozygote that was …
Human uncoupling protein 3 (UCP3) is a mitochondrial transmembrane carrier that uncouples oxidative ATP phosphorylation. With the capacity to participate in thermogenesis and energy balance, UCP3 is an important obesity candidate gene. A missense polymorphism in exon 3 (V102I) was identified in an obese and diabetic proband. A mutation introducing a stop codon in exon 4 (R143X) and a terminal polymorphism in the splice donor junction of exon 6 were also identified in a compound heterozygote that was morbidly obese and diabetic. Allele frequencies of the exon 3 and exon 6 splice junction polymorphisms were determined and found to be similar in Gullah-speaking African Americans and the Mende tribe of Sierra Leone, but absent in Caucasians. Moreover, in exon 6-splice donor heterozygotes, basal fat oxidation rates were reduced by 50%, and the respiratory quotient was markedly increased compared with wild-type individuals, implicating a role for UCP3 in metabolic fuel partitioning.
The Journal of Clinical Investigation