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Genetic Interactions with Intrauterine Diabetes Exposure in Relation to Obesity: The EPOCH and Project Viva Studies

Authors :
Marie-France Hivert
Ethan M. Lange
Sridharan Raghavan
Ruby Fore
Elizabeth Litkowski
Emily Oken
Maggie A. Stanislawski
Sheryl L. Rifas-Shiman
Dana Dabelea
Leslie A. Lange
Source :
Pediatric Reports, Volume 13, Issue 2, Pages 36-288, Pediatric Reports, Vol 13, Iss 36, Pp 279-288 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
MDPI, 2021.

Abstract

To examine whether BMI-associated genetic risk variants modify the association of intrauterine diabetes exposure with childhood BMI z-scores, we assessed the interaction between 95 BMI-associated genetic variants and in utero exposure to maternal diabetes among 459 children in the Exploring Perinatal Outcomes among Children historical prospective cohort study (n = 86 exposed<br />373 unexposed) in relation to age- and sex-standardized childhood BMI z-scores (mean age = 10.3 years, standard deviation = 1.5 years). For the genetic variants showing a nominally significant interaction, we assessed the relationship in an additional 621 children in Project Viva, which is an independent longitudinal cohort study, and used meta-analysis to combine the results for the two studies. Seven of the ninety-five genetic variants tested exhibited a nominally significant interaction with in utero exposure to maternal diabetes in relation to the offspring BMI z-score in EPOCH. Five of the seven variants exhibited a consistent direction of interaction effect across both EPOCH and Project Viva. While none achieved statistical significance in the meta-analysis after accounting for multiple testing, three variants exhibited a nominally significant interaction with in utero exposure to maternal diabetes in relation to offspring BMI z-score: rs10733682 near LMX1B (interaction β = 0.39<br />standard error (SE) = 0.17), rs17001654 near SCARB2 (β = 0.53<br />SE = 0.22), and rs16951275 near MAP2K5 (β = 0.37<br />SE = 0.17). BMI-associated genetic variants may enhance the association between exposure to in utero diabetes and higher childhood BMI, but larger studies of in utero exposures are necessary to confirm the observed nominally significant relationships.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20367503 and 2036749X
Volume :
13
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pediatric Reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....28fee5c33dbd7900bbe678ee71dc2fad