Scheid Jennifer L, Carr Katelyn A, Lin Henry, Fletcher Kelly D, Sucheston Lara, Singh Prashant K, Salis Robbert, Erbe Richard W, Faith Myles S, Allison David B, Epstein Leonard H
Department of Pediatrics, University at Buffalo, School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, United States.
Department of Cancer Prevention and Control, Roswell Park Cancer Institute, United States.
Physiol Behav. 2014 Jun 10;132:51-6. doi: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2014.04.029. Epub 2014 Apr 24.
Food reinforcement (RRVfood) is related to increased energy intake, cross-sectionally related to obesity, and prospectively related to weight gain. The fat mass and obesity-associated (FTO) gene is related to elevated body mass index and increased energy intake. The primary purpose of the current study was to determine whether any of 68 FTO single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) or a FTO risk score moderate the association between food reinforcement and energy or macronutrient intake. Energy and macronutrient intake was measured using a laboratory ad libitum snack food consumption task in 237 adults of varying BMI. Controlling for BMI, the relative reinforcing value of reading (RRVreading) and proportion of African ancestry, RRVfood predicted 14.2% of the variance in energy intake, as well as predicted carbohydrate, fat, protein and sugar intake. In individual analyses, six FTO SNPs (rs12921970, rs9936768, rs12446047, rs7199716, rs8049933 and rs11076022, spanning approximately 251kbp) moderated the relationship between RRVfood and energy intake to predict an additional 4.9-7.4% of variance in energy intake. We created an FTO risk score based on 5 FTO SNPs (rs9939609, rs8050136, rs3751812, rs1421085, and rs1121980) that are related to BMI in multiple studies. The FTO risk score did not increase variance accounted for beyond individual FTO SNPs. rs12921970 and rs12446047 served as moderators of the relationship between RRVfood and carbohydrate, fat, protein, and sugar intake. This study shows for the first time that the relationship between RRVfood and energy intake is moderated by FTO SNPs. Research is needed to understand how these processes interact to predict energy and macronutrient intake.
食物强化(RRVfood)与能量摄入增加有关,横断面研究显示与肥胖有关,前瞻性研究显示与体重增加有关。脂肪量和肥胖相关(FTO)基因与体重指数升高和能量摄入增加有关。本研究的主要目的是确定68个FTO单核苷酸多态性(SNP)中的任何一个或FTO风险评分是否会调节食物强化与能量或宏量营养素摄入之间的关联。在237名BMI各异的成年人中,通过实验室随意食用零食任务来测量能量和宏量营养素摄入。在控制BMI、阅读的相对强化值(RRVreading)和非洲血统比例后,RRVfood可预测能量摄入中14.2%的变异,以及碳水化合物、脂肪、蛋白质和糖的摄入。在个体分析中,6个FTO SNP(rs12921970、rs9936768、rs12446047、rs7199716、rs8049933和rs11076022,跨度约251kbp)调节了RRVfood与能量摄入之间的关系,可预测能量摄入中额外4.9 - 7.4%的变异。我们基于5个在多项研究中与BMI相关的FTO SNP(rs9939609、rs8050136、rs3751812、rs1421085和rs1121980)创建了一个FTO风险评分。FTO风险评分并未增加除个体FTO SNP之外所解释的变异。rs12921970和rs12446047作为RRVfood与碳水化合物、脂肪、蛋白质和糖摄入之间关系的调节因子。本研究首次表明,FTO SNP调节了RRVfood与能量摄入之间的关系。需要开展研究来了解这些过程如何相互作用以预测能量和宏量营养素摄入。