1[2]Harrell JS, Bomar P, McMurray R, et al. Leptin and obesity in mother-child pairs. Biol Res Nurs 2001,3(2): 55
2[3]Roemmich JN, Rogol AD. Role of leptin during childhood growth and development. Endocrinol Metab Clin North Am, 1999, 28(4):749
3[4]Oeffner F, Bornholdt D, Ziegler A. Significant association between a silent polymorphism in the neuromedin B gene and body weight in German children and adolescents. Axta Diabetol, 2000,37(2):93
4[5]Bray MS, Boerwinkle E, Hanis CL. Sequence variation within the neuropeptide Y gene and obesity in Mexican Americans. Obeses Research, 2000, 8(3):219
5[6]Miraglia Del, Giudice E, Cirillo G,et al. Molecular screening of the proopiomelanocortin (POMC ) gene in Italian obese children: report of three new mutations. Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord, 2001, 25(1):61
6[7]Hinney A, Schmidt A, Nottebom K. Swveral mutaions in the melanocortin-4 receptor gene including a nonsense and a frameshift mutation associated with dominantly inherited obesity in humans. J Clin Endocrinol Metab, 1999,84(4):1483
7[8]Dubern B, Clement K, Pelloux V, et al. Mutational analysis of melanocortin-4 receptor, agouti-related protein, and alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone genes in severely obese children. J Pediatr, 2001, 139(2):204
8[9]Sina M,Hinney A,Ziegler A,et al. Pnenotypes in thyree pedigrees with autosomal dominat obesity caused by haploinsufficiency mutations in the melanocortin-4 receptor gene. American Journal of Hmuman Genetics, 1999,65(6): 1501
9[10]Siffert W,Forster P,Jockel KH. Worldwide ethnic distribution of the G protein beta3 subunit 825Tallele and its associantion with obesity in Caucasian, Chinese and Black African individuals. J Am Soc Nephrol, 1999,10(9):1921
10[11]Hinney A, Geller F, Neupert T, et al. No evidence for involvement of alleles of the 825-C/T polymorphism of the G-protein subunit beta 3 in body weight regulation. Exp Clin Endocrinol Diabetes, 2001, 109(8):402