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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Background: Both genetic and environmental factors are known to
affect body mass index (BMI), but detailed understanding of how
their effects differ during childhood and adolescence is lacking.
Objectives: We analyzed the genetic and environmental contribu tions to BMI variation from infancy to early adulthood and the ways
they differ by sex and geographic regions representing high (North
America and Australia), moderate (Europe), and low levels (East
Asia) of obesogenic environments.
Design: Data were available for 87,782 complete twin pairs from 0.5 to
19.5 y of age from 45 cohorts. Analyses were based on 383,092 BMI
measurements. Variation in BMI was decomposed into genetic and en vironmental components through genetic structural equation modeling.
Results: The variance of BMI increased from 5 y of age along with
increasing mean BMI. The proportion of BMI variation explained
by additive genetic factors was lowest at 4 y of age in boys (a2 =
0.42) and girls (a2 = 0.41) and then generally increased to 0.75 in
both sexes at 19 y of age. This was because of a stronger influence
of environmental factors shared by co-twins in midchildhood. After
15 y of age, the effect of shared environment was not observed.
The sex-specific expression of genetic factors was seen in infancy
but was most prominent at 13 y of age and older. The variance of
BMI was highest in North America and Australia and lowest in
East Asia, but the relative proportion of genetic variation to total
variation remained roughly similar across different regions.
Conclusions: Environmental factors shared by co-twins affect BMI
in childhood, but little evidence for their contribution was found in
late adolescence. Our results suggest that genetic factors play a ma jor role in the variation of BMI in adolescence among populations
of different ethnicities exposed to different environmental factors
related to obesity.
Description
Keywords
BMI Children Genetics International comparisons Twin . Faculdade de Ciências Sociais
Citation
Silventoinen, K., Jelenkovic, A., Sund, R., Hur, Y. M., Yokoyama, Y., Honda, C., ... & Kaprio, J. (2016). Genetic and environmental effects on body mass index from infancy to the onset of adulthood: an individual-based pooled analysis of 45 twin cohorts participating in the COllaborative project of Development of Anthropometrical measures in Twins (CODATwins) study. The American journal of clinical nutrition, 104(2), 371-379. https://doi.org/10.3945/ajcn.116.130252
Publisher
American Society for Nutrition