Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Protein-truncating variants in BSN are associated with severe adult-onset obesity, type 2 diabetes and fatty liver disease

Yajie Zhao, Maria Chukanova, Katherine A. Kentistou, Zammy Fairhurst-Hunter, Anna Maria Siegert, Raina Jia, Georgina K.C. Dowsett, Eugene J. Gardner, Katherine Lawler, Felix R. Day, Lena R Kaisinger, Yi‐Chun Loraine Tung, Brian Lam, Hsiao‐Jou Cortina Chen, Quanli Wang, Jaime Berúmen, Pablo Kuri‐Morales, Roberto Tapia‐Conyer, Jesús Alegre-Díaz, Inês Barroso, Jonathan Emberson, Jason Torres, Rory Collins, Danish Saleheen, Katherine R. Smith, Dirk S. Paul, Florian T. Merkle, I. Sadaf Farooqi, Nicholas J. Wareham, Slavé Petrovski, Stephen O’Rahilly, Ken K. Ong, Giles S.H. Yeo, John R. B. Perry

Nature Genetics · 2024

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Summary

Obesity is a major risk factor for many common diseases and has a substantial heritable component. To identify new genetic determinants, we performed exome-sequence analyses for adult body mass index (BMI) in up to 587,027 individuals. We identified rare loss-of-function variants in two genes (BSN and APBA1) with effects substantially larger than those of well-established obesity genes such as MC4R. In contrast to most other obesity-related genes, rare variants in BSN and APBA1 were not associated with normal variation in childhood adiposity. Furthermore, BSN protein-truncating variants (PTVs) magnified the influence of common genetic variants associated with BMI, with a common variant polygenic score exhibiting an effect twice as large in BSN PTV carriers than in noncarriers. Finally, we

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1038/s41588-024-01694-x
Catalogue ID
SNmois7sjm-zlu4ze
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