Genetic determinants of BMI from early childhood to adolescence: the Santiago Longitudinal Study
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Justice, A. E.
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Genetic determinants of BMI from early childhood to adolescence: the Santiago Longitudinal Study
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Abstract
Background: While the genetic contribution to obesity is well established,
few studies have examined how genetic variants influence standardized body mass
index Z-score (BMIz) in Hispanics/Latinos, especially across childhood and
adolescence.
Objectives: We estimated the effect of established BMIz loci in Chilean children
of the Santiago Longitudinal Study (SLS).
Methods: We examined associations with BMIz at age 10 for 15 loci previously
identified in European children. For significant loci, we performed association analyses
at ages 5 and 16 years, for which we have smaller sample sizes. We tested associations
of unweighted genetic risk scores (GRSs) for previously identified tag
variants (GRS_EUR) and from the most significant variants in SLS at each locus
(GRS_SLS).
Results: We generalized five variants at age 10 (P < 0.05 and directionally consistent),
including rs543874 that reached Bonferroni-corrected significance. The effect
on BMIz was greatest at age 10 for all significant loci, except FTO, which
exhibited an increase in effect from ages 5 to 16. Both GRSs were associated with
BMIz (P < 0.0001), but GRS_SLS explained a much greater proportion of the variation
(13.63%).
Conclusion: Our results underscore the importance of conducting genetic investigations
across life stages and selecting ancestry appropriate tag variants in future
studies for disease prediction and clinical evaluation.
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Artículo de publicación SCOPUS
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/171514
DOI: 10.1111/ijpo.12479
ISSN: 20476310
20476302
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Pediatric Obesity, Volumen 14, Issue 3, 2019
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