The arrestin domain-containing 3 protein regulates body mass and energy expenditure.

Article Details

Citation

Patwari P, Emilsson V, Schadt EE, Chutkow WA, Lee S, Marsili A, Zhang Y, Dobrin R, Cohen DE, Larsen PR, Zavacki AM, Fong LG, Young SG, Lee RT

The arrestin domain-containing 3 protein regulates body mass and energy expenditure.

Cell Metab. 2011 Nov 2;14(5):671-83. doi: 10.1016/j.cmet.2011.08.011. Epub 2011 Oct 6.

PubMed ID
21982743 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

A human genome-wide linkage scan for obesity identified a linkage peak on chromosome 5q13-15. Positional cloning revealed an association of a rare haplotype to high body-mass index (BMI) in males but not females. The risk locus contains a single gene, "arrestin domain-containing 3" (ARRDC3), an uncharacterized alpha-arrestin. Inactivating Arrdc3 in mice led to a striking resistance to obesity, with greater impact on male mice. Mice with decreased ARRDC3 levels were protected from obesity due to increased energy expenditure through increased activity levels and increased thermogenesis of both brown and white adipose tissues. ARRDC3 interacted directly with beta-adrenergic receptors, and loss of ARRDC3 increased the response to beta-adrenergic stimulation in isolated adipose tissue. These results demonstrate that ARRDC3 is a gender-sensitive regulator of obesity and energy expenditure and reveal a surprising diversity for arrestin family protein functions.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Beta-3 adrenergic receptorP13945Details