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Citation

Graff, Mariaelisa; North, Kari E.; Mohlke, Karen L.; Lange, Leslie A.; Luo, Jingchun; Harris, Kathleen Mullan; Young, Kristin L.; Richardson, Andrea S.; Lange, Ethan M.; & Gordon-Larsen, Penny (2012). Estimation of Genetic Effects on BMI during Adolescence in an Ethnically Diverse Cohort: The National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. Nutrition & Diabetes, 2, e47. PMCID: PMC3461356

Abstract

Objective: The contribution of genetic variants to body mass index (BMI) during adolescence across multiethnic samples is largely unknown. We selected genetic loci associated with BMI or obesity in European-descent samples and examined them in a multiethnic adolescent sample.
Design and Sample: In 5103 European American (EA), 1748 African American (AfA), 1304 Hispanic American (HA) and 439 Asian American (AsA) participants of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health; ages 12–21 years, 47.5% male), we assessed the association between 41 established obesity-related single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) with BMI using additive genetic models, stratified by race/ethnicity, and in a pooled meta-analysis sample. We also compared the magnitude of effect for BMI–SNP associations in EA and AfA adolescents to comparable effect estimates from 11 861 EA and AfA adults in the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities study (ages 45–64 years, 43.2% male).
Results: Thirty-five of 41 BMI–SNP associations were directionally consistent with published studies in European populations, 18 achieved nominal significance (P<0.05; effect sizes from 0.19 to 0.71 kg m−2 increase in BMI per effect allele), while 4 (FTO, TMEM18, TFAP2B, MC4R) remained significant after Bonferroni correction (P<0.0015). Of 41 BMI–SNP associations in AfA, HA and AsA adolescents, nine, three and five, respectively, were directionally consistent and nominally significant. In the pooled meta-analysis, 36 of 41 effect estimates were directionally consistent and 21 of 36 were nominally significant. In EA adolescents, BMI effect estimates were larger (P<0.05) for variants near TMEM18, PTER and MC4R and smaller for variants near MTIF3 and NRXN3 compared with EA adults.
Conclusion: Our findings suggest that obesity susceptibility loci may have a comparatively stronger role during adolescence than during adulthood, with variation across race/ethnic subpopulation.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nutd.2012.20

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2012

Journal Title

Nutrition & Diabetes

Author(s)

Graff, Mariaelisa
North, Kari E.
Mohlke, Karen L.
Lange, Leslie A.
Luo, Jingchun
Harris, Kathleen Mullan
Young, Kristin L.
Richardson, Andrea S.
Lange, Ethan M.
Gordon-Larsen, Penny

PMCID

PMC3461356

ORCiD

Gordon-Larsen - 0000-0001-5322-4188