Butte Nancy F, Cai Guowen, Cole Shelley A, Comuzzie Anthony G
US Department of Agriculture/Agricultural Research Service Children's Nutrition Research Center, Department of Pediatrics, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
Am J Clin Nutr. 2006 Sep;84(3):646-54; quiz 673-4. doi: 10.1093/ajcn/84.3.646.
Genetic and environmental contributions to childhood obesity are poorly delineated.
The Viva la Familia Study was designed to genetically map childhood obesity and its comorbidities in the Hispanic population. The objectives of this report were to describe the study design and to summarize genetic and environmental contributions to the phenotypic variation in obesity and risk factors for metabolic diseases in Hispanic children.
The Viva la Familia cohort consisted of 1030 children from 319 families selected based on an overweight proband between the ages of 4 and 19 y. In-depth phenotyping to characterize the overweight children and their siblings included anthropometric and body-composition traits by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry and assessments of diet by 24-h recalls, physical activity by accelerometry, and risk factors for metabolic diseases by standard biochemical methods. Univariate quantitative genetic analysis was used to partition phenotypic variance into additive genetic and environmental components by using the computer program SOLAR.
Sex, age, and environmental covariates explained 1-91% of the phenotypic variance. Heritabilities of anthropometric indexes ranged from 0.24 to 0.75. Heritability coefficients for the body-composition traits ranged from 0.18 to 0.35. Diet and physical activity presented heritabilities of 0.32 to 0.69. Risk factors for metabolic diseases were heritable with coefficients ranging from 0.25 to 0.73. Significant genetic correlations between obesity traits and risk factors for metabolic diseases substantiated pleiotropy between traits.
The Viva la Familia Study provides evidence of a strong genetic contribution to the high prevalence of obesity and its comorbidities in Hispanic children.
遗传因素和环境因素对儿童肥胖的影响尚未明确界定。
“活力家庭研究”旨在对西班牙裔人群中的儿童肥胖及其合并症进行基因定位。本报告的目的是描述研究设计,并总结遗传因素和环境因素对西班牙裔儿童肥胖表型变异及代谢疾病风险因素的影响。
“活力家庭”队列由来自319个家庭的1030名儿童组成,这些家庭是根据4至19岁的超重先证者挑选出来的。对超重儿童及其兄弟姐妹进行深入的表型分析,包括通过双能X线吸收法测量人体测量和身体成分特征,通过24小时回顾法评估饮食,通过加速度计评估身体活动,并通过标准生化方法评估代谢疾病的风险因素。使用计算机程序SOLAR进行单变量定量遗传分析,将表型变异分为加性遗传成分和环境成分。
性别、年龄和环境协变量解释了1%至91%的表型变异。人体测量指标的遗传度范围为0.24至0.75。身体成分特征的遗传系数范围为0.18至0.35。饮食和身体活动的遗传度为0.32至0.69。代谢疾病风险因素具有遗传性,系数范围为0.25至0.73。肥胖特征与代谢疾病风险因素之间存在显著的遗传相关性,证实了各特征之间的多效性。
“活力家庭研究”提供了证据,表明遗传因素对西班牙裔儿童肥胖及其合并症的高患病率有很大影响。