Abstract

Obesity is a serious international health problem that increases the risk of several diet-related chronic diseases. The genetic factors predisposing to obesity are little understood. Rcan2 was originally identified as a thyroid hormone-responsive gene. In the mouse, two splicing variants that harbor distinct tissue-specific expression patterns have been identified: Rcan2-3 is expressed predominately in the brain, whereas Rcan2-1 is expressed in the brain and other tissues such as the heart and skeletal muscle. Here, we show that Rcan2 plays an important role in the development of age- and diet-induced obesity. We found that although the loss of Rcan2 function in mice slowed growth in the first few weeks after birth, it also significantly ameliorated age- and diet-induced obesity in the mice by causing a reduction in food intake rather than increased energy expenditure. Rcan2 expression was most prominent in the ventromedial, dorsomedial and paraventricular hypothalamic nuclei governing energy balance. Fasting and refeeding experiment showed that only Rcan2-3 mRNA expression is up-regulated in the hypothalamus by fasting, and loss of Rcan2 significantly attenuates the hyperphagic response to starvation. Using double-mutant (Lepob/ob Rcan2 −/−) mice, we were also able to demonstrate that Rcan2 and leptin regulate body weight through different pathways. Our findings indicate that there may be an Rcan2-dependent mechanism which regulates food intake and promotes weight gain through a leptin-independent pathway. This study provides novel information on the control of body weight in mice and should improve our understanding of the mechanisms of obesity in humans.

Highlights

  • Obesity has reached epidemic proportions globally over the past several decades, and poses a major risk for serious diet-related chronic diseases, such as type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular diseases [1,2,3]

  • We fortuitously found that Rcan22/2 mice showed reduced body weight and white adipose mass compared to the control mice, especially, they showed a significantly reduced rate of weight gain on the high-fat diet

  • The results showed that Rcan2 regulates food intake and body weight through the mechanism independent from leptin pathway

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Summary

Introduction

Obesity has reached epidemic proportions globally over the past several decades, and poses a major risk for serious diet-related chronic diseases, such as type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular diseases [1,2,3]. The results showed that Rcan2 regulates food intake and body weight through the mechanism independent from leptin pathway.

Results
Conclusion
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