1. Academic Validation
  2. Clinical and molecular genetic spectrum of congenital deficiency of the leptin receptor

Clinical and molecular genetic spectrum of congenital deficiency of the leptin receptor

  • N Engl J Med. 2007 Jan 18;356(3):237-47. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa063988.
I Sadaf Farooqi 1 Teresia Wangensteen Stephan Collins Wendy Kimber Giuseppe Matarese Julia M Keogh Emma Lank Bill Bottomley Judith Lopez-Fernandez Ivan Ferraz-Amaro Mehul T Dattani Oya Ercan Anne Grethe Myhre Lars Retterstol Richard Stanhope Julie A Edge Sheila McKenzie Nader Lessan Maryam Ghodsi Veronica De Rosa Francesco Perna Silvia Fontana Inês Barroso Dag E Undlien Stephen O'Rahilly
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Cambridge Institute for Medical Research, University Department of Clinical Biochemistry, Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge, United Kingdom. isf20@cam.ac.uk
Abstract

Background: A single family has been described in which obesity results from a mutation in the leptin-receptor gene (LEPR), but the prevalence of such mutations in severe, early-onset obesity has not been systematically examined.

Methods: We sequenced LEPR in 300 subjects with hyperphagia and severe early-onset obesity, including 90 probands from consanguineous families, and investigated the extent to which mutations cosegregated with obesity and affected receptor function. We evaluated metabolic, endocrine, and immune function in probands and affected relatives.

Results: Of the 300 subjects, 8 (3%) had nonsense or missense LEPR mutations--7 were homozygotes, and 1 was a compound heterozygote. All missense mutations resulted in impaired receptor signaling. Affected subjects were characterized by hyperphagia, severe obesity, alterations in immune function, and delayed puberty due to hypogonadotropic hypogonadism. Serum Leptin levels were within the range predicted by the elevated fat mass in these subjects. Their clinical features were less severe than those of subjects with congenital Leptin deficiency.

Conclusions: The prevalence of pathogenic LEPR mutations in a cohort of subjects with severe, early-onset obesity was 3%. Circulating levels of Leptin were not disproportionately elevated, suggesting that serum Leptin cannot be used as a marker for leptin-receptor deficiency. Congenital leptin-receptor deficiency should be considered in the differential diagnosis in any child with hyperphagia and severe obesity in the absence of developmental delay or dysmorphism.

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