Name: | Description: | Size: | Format: | |
---|---|---|---|---|
681.51 KB | Adobe PDF |
Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Objective: The objective of this study was to analyze how parental education modifies the genetic and
environmental variances of BMI from infancy to old age in three geographic-cultural regions.
Methods: A pooled sample of 29 cohorts including 143,499 twin individuals with information on parental
education and BMI from age 1 to 79 years (299,201 BMI measures) was analyzed by genetic twin
modeling.
Results: Until 4 years of age, parental education was not consistently associated with BMI. Thereafter,
higher parental education level was associated with lower BMI in males and females. Total and additive
genetic variances of BMI were smaller in the offspring of highly educated parents than in those whose
parents had low education levels. Especially in North American and Australian children, environmental
factors shared by co-twins also contributed to the higher BMI variation in the low education level category.
In Europe and East Asia, the associations of parental education with mean BMI and BMI variance were
weaker than in North America and Australia.
Conclusions: Lower parental education level is associated with higher mean BMI and larger genetic vari ance of BMI after early childhood, especially in the obesogenic macro-environment. The interplay among
genetic predisposition, childhood social environment, and macro-social context is important for socioeco nomic differences in BMI
Description
Keywords
BMI Genetics Parental education . Faculdade de Ciências Sociais
Citation
Silventoinen, K., Jelenkovic, A., Latvala, A., Yokoyama, Y., Sund, R., Sugawara, M., ... & Kaprio, J. (2019). Parental education and genetics of BMI from infancy to old age: a pooled analysis of 29 twin cohorts. Obesity, 27(5), 855-865. doi:10.1002/oby.22451
Publisher
Obesity Society