Abnormal splicing of the leptin receptor in diabetic mice.
Abstract
Mutations in the mouse diabetes (db) gene result in obesity and
diabetes in a syndrome resembling morbid human obesity. Previous
data suggest that the db gene encodes the receptor for the obese
(ob) gene product, leptin. A leptin receptor was recently cloned
from choroid plexus and shown to map to the same 6-cM interval
on mouse chromosome 4 as db. This receptor maps to the same 300-kilobase
interval as db, and has at least six alternatively spliced forms.
One of these splice variants is expressed at a high level in the
hypothalamus, and is abnormally spliced in C57BL/Ks db/db mice.
The mutant protein is missing the cytoplasmic region, and is likely
to be defective in signal transduction. This suggests that the
weight-reducing effects of leptin may be mediated by signal transduction
through a leptin receptor in the hypothalamus.