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OBESITY-INDUCED DIABETES (DIABESITY) IN C57BL/KSJ MICE PRODUCES ABERRANT TRANSREGULATION OF SEX STEROID SULFOTRANSFERASE GENES
Author(s): LEITER EH, CHAPMAN HD
Source: JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION    Volume: 93    Issue: 5    Pages: 2007-2013    Published: MAY 1994  
Times Cited: 35     References: 31     
Abstract: The diabetes (db) gene is a recessive obesity mutation in the mouse capable of producing diabetes only through interaction with heretofore undefined modifiers in the genetic background of certain inbred strains. Here we identify the genetic map locations of androgen and estrogen sulfotransferase genes important in maintaining the balance of active sex steroids in the liver. The Std locus encoding dehydroepiandrosterone sulfotransferase was mapped to proximal Chromosome 7, and the Ste locus encoding estrogen sulfotransferase was mapped to Chromosome 5. The db mutation in the diabetes-susceptible C57BL/KsJ strain aberrantly regulated mRNA transcript levels from these two loci. Hepatic Ste mRNA transcripts were increased from undetectable levels in normal males and females to high levels in db/db mice of both sexes. An anomalous suppression of Std transcription was observed in db/db females, but not in normal females. These reciprocal changes in mRNA concentrations in mutant females were reflected by an induction of a high affinity estrogen sulfotransferase activity and a concomitant loss of dehydroepiandrosterone sulfotransferase activity. These db gene-elicited effects were specific for the sex steroid sulfotransferases since other potential sex steroid metabolizing enzymes (phenol sulfotransferase, sex steroid sulfohydrolase, and UDP-glucuronyltransferase) were unaffected. These aberrant changes would virilize hepatic metabolism in females by increasing the ratio of active androgens to estrogens. In human females, non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus often develops when visceral obesity and hyperinsulinemia are associated with hyperandrogenization. This study demonstrates that background modifier genes interacting deleteriously with an obesity mutation are not necessarily defective alleles. Rather, some are functional genes whose regulation has been altered by pleiotropic effects of the obesity gene.
Document Type: Article
Language: English
Reprint Address: LEITER, EH (reprint author), JACKSON LAB, 600 MAIN ST, BAR HARBOR, ME 04609 USA
Publisher: ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS, 1114 FIRST AVE, 4TH FL, NEW YORK, NY 10021
Subject Category: Medicine, Research & Experimental
IDS Number: NJ960
ISSN: 0021-9738
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