School of Public Health, Physiotherapy and Population Science, University College Dublin, Woodview House, Belfield, Dublin 4, Ireland.
BMC Public Health. 2012 Jan 25;12:81. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-12-81.
Obesity and its measure of body mass index are strongly determined by parental body size. Debate continues as to whether both parents contribute equally to offspring body mass which is key to understanding the aetiology of the disease. The aim of this study was to use cohort data from three generations of one family to examine the relative maternal and paternal associations with offspring body mass index and how these associations compare with family height to demonstrate evidence of genetic or environmental cross-generational transmission.
669 of 1082 families were followed up in 2007/8 as part of the Lifeways study, a prospective observational cross-generation linkage cohort. Height and weight were measured in 529 Irish children aged 5 to 7 years and were self-reported by parents and grandparents. All adults provided information on self-rated health, education status, and indicators of income, diet and physical activity. Associations between the weight, height, and body mass index of family members were examined with mixed models and heritability estimates computed using linear regression analysis.
Self-rated health was associated with lower BMI for all family members, as was age for children. When these effects were accounted for evidence of familial associations of BMI from one generation to the next was more apparent in the maternal line. Heritability estimates were higher (h2 = 0.40) for mother-offspring pairs compared to father-offspring pairs (h2 = 0.22). In the previous generation, estimates were higher between mothers-parents (h2 = 0.54-0.60) but not between fathers-parents (h2 = -0.04-0.17). Correlations between mother and offspring across two generations remained significant when modelled with fixed variables of socioeconomic status, health, and lifestyle. A similar analysis of height showed strong familial associations from maternal and paternal lines across each generation.
This is the first family cohort study to report an enduring association between mother and offspring BMI over three generations. The evidence of BMI transmission over three generations through the maternal line in an observational study corroborates the findings of animal studies. A more detailed analysis of geno and phenotypic data over three generations is warranted to understand the nature of this maternal-offspring relationship.
肥胖及其身体质量指数(BMI)的衡量标准主要由父母的体型决定。关于父母双方对后代体重的影响是否均等,即了解这种疾病病因的关键,一直存在争议。本研究的目的是利用一个家族三代人的队列数据,检查后代 BMI 与母亲和父亲的相对关联,以及这些关联如何与家庭身高相比较,以证明遗传或环境跨代传递的证据。
2007/8 年,作为前瞻性观察性跨代连锁队列 Lifeways 研究的一部分,对 1082 个家庭中的 669 个家庭进行了随访。529 名 5 至 7 岁的爱尔兰儿童的身高和体重由父母和祖父母自行测量。所有成年人都提供了关于自我评估健康状况、教育状况以及收入、饮食和体育活动指标的信息。使用混合模型检查家庭成员体重、身高和 BMI 之间的关联,并使用线性回归分析计算遗传度估计值。
自我评估健康状况与所有家庭成员的 BMI 呈负相关,儿童的年龄也与 BMI 呈负相关。当考虑到这些影响时,从一代到下一代的 BMI 家族关联在母系中更为明显。母亲-后代对的遗传度估计值较高(h2=0.40),而父亲-后代对的遗传度估计值较低(h2=0.22)。在上一代中,母亲-父母(h2=0.54-0.60)之间的估计值较高,但父亲-父母(h2=-0.04-0.17)之间的估计值较低。当用社会经济地位、健康和生活方式的固定变量对两代之间母亲和后代的关系进行建模时,相关性仍然显著。对身高进行类似的分析显示,母系和父系在每一代都存在强烈的家族关联。
这是第一个报告母亲和后代 BMI 之间存在三代持续关联的家族队列研究。在观察性研究中,通过母系三代传递 BMI 的证据与动物研究的发现相符。为了了解这种母子关系的性质,需要对三代的基因和表型数据进行更详细的分析。