Objective: To investigate whether genetic variation at the loci encoding the corticotropin-releasing factor receptors-1 and -2 (CRF-R1 and CRF-R2) contributes to human obesity.
Design: The coding region of the CRF-R1 and CRF-R2 genes was screened in 51 severely obese children (body mass index (BMI)>4 kg/m(2) standard deviations above the age-related mean) using denaturing high-performance liquid chromatography and direct nucleotide sequencing. Common polymorphisms that were identified were typed from a UK Caucasian population-based cohort by a PCR-based forced restriction digestion. A repeated measures analysis was used to determine associations between the C861T and G1047A genotypes and anthropometric and biochemical indices relevant to obesity.
Results: In subjects with extreme early-onset obesity, four missense mutations were found, each in a single individual: CRF-R1 (Val161Met) and CRF-R2 (Glu220Asp, Val240Ile and Val411Met). However, none of these missense mutations clearly cosegregated with obesity in family studies. Two common single-nucleotide polymorphisms, C861T (Cys287Cys) in CRF-R1 and G1047A (Ser349Ser) in CRF-R2, were also detected. G1047A did not associate with any obesity-related phenotype. In contrast, carriers of the CRF-R1 polymorphism, C861T, had a significantly higher body mass index (BMI).
Conclusion: Mutations in the coding sequence of the CRF-R1 and CRF-R2 genes are unlikely to be a common monogenic cause of early-onset obesity. In an adult UK Caucasian population, the CRF-R1 C861T polymorphism is associated with increased BMI.