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The heritability of BMI varies across the range of BMI—a heritability curve analysis in a twin cohort

Authors :
Francesca Azzolini
Geir D. Berentsen
Hans J. Skaug
Jacob V. B. Hjelmborg
Jaakko A. Kaprio
Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland
University of Helsinki
Source :
International Journal of Obesity. 46:1786-1791
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Background The heritability of traits such as body mass index (BMI), a measure of obesity, is generally estimated using family and twin studies, and increasingly by molecular genetic approaches. These studies generally assume that genetic effects are uniform across all trait values, yet there is emerging evidence that this may not always be the case. Method/Subjects This paper analyzes twin data using a recently developed measure of heritability called the heritability curve. Under the assumption that trait values in twin pairs are governed by a flexible Gaussian mixture distribution, heritability curves may vary across trait values. The data consist of repeated measures of BMI on 1506 monozygotic (MZ) and 2843 like-sexed dizygotic (DZ) adult twin pairs, gathered from multiple surveys in older Finnish Twin Cohorts. Results The heritability curve and BMI value-specific MZ and DZ pairwise correlations were estimated, and these varied across the range of BMI. MZ correlations were highest at BMI values from 21 to 24, with a stronger decrease for women than for men at higher values. Models with additive and dominance effects fit best at low and high BMI values, while models with additive genetic and common environmental effects fit best in the normal range of BMI. Conclusions We demonstrate that twin and molecular genetic studies need to consider how genetic effects vary across trait values. Such variation may reconcile findings of traits with high heritability and major differences in mean values between countries or over time.

Details

ISSN :
14765497 and 03070565
Volume :
46
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Obesity
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c62523965f8630adcb2813f8c53c5680