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Abdominal obesity and circulating metabolites: A twin study approach.

Authors :
Bogl LH
Kaye SM
Rämö JT
Kangas AJ
Soininen P
Hakkarainen A
Lundbom J
Lundbom N
Ortega-Alonso A
Rissanen A
Ala-Korpela M
Kaprio J
Pietiläinen KH
Source :
Metabolism: clinical and experimental [Metabolism] 2016 Mar; Vol. 65 (3), pp. 111-21. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 Oct 31.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Objective: To investigate how obesity, insulin resistance and low-grade inflammation link to circulating metabolites, and whether the connections are due to genetic or environmental factors.<br />Subjects and Methods: Circulating serum metabolites were determined by proton NMR spectroscopy. Data from 1368 (531 monozygotic (MZ) and 837 dizygotic (DZ)) twins were used for bivariate twin modeling to derive the genetic (rg) and environmental (re) correlations between waist circumference (WC) and serum metabolites. Detailed examination of the associations between fat distribution (DEXA) and metabolic health (HOMA-IR, CRP) was performed among 286 twins including 33 BMI-discordant MZ pairs (intrapair BMI difference ≥3 kg/m(2)).<br />Results: Fat, especially in the abdominal area (i.e. WC, android fat % and android to gynoid fat ratio), together with HOMA-IR and CRP correlated significantly with an atherogenic lipoprotein profile, higher levels of branched-chain (BCAA) and aromatic amino acids, higher levels of glycoprotein, and a more saturated fatty acid profile. In contrast, a higher proportion of gynoid to total fat associated with a favorable metabolite profile. There was a significant genetic overlap between WC and several metabolites, most strongly with phenylalanine (rg=0.40), glycoprotein (rg=0.37), serum triglycerides (rg=0.36), BCAAs (rg=0.30-0.40), HDL particle diameter (rg=-0.33) and HDL cholesterol (rg=-0.30). The effect of acquired obesity within the discordant MZ pairs was particularly strong for atherogenic lipoproteins.<br />Conclusions: A wide range of unfavorable alterations in the serum metabolome was associated with abdominal obesity, insulin resistance and low-grade inflammation. Twin modeling and obesity-discordant twin analysis suggest that these associations are partly explained by shared genes but also reflect mechanisms independent of genetic liability.<br /> (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1532-8600
Volume :
65
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Metabolism: clinical and experimental
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
26892522
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.metabol.2015.10.027