Guo Guang, Liu Hexuan, Wang Ling, Shen Haipeng, Hu Wen
Department of Sociology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, 27599, USA.
Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, 27599, USA.
Demography. 2015 Oct;52(5):1651-70. doi: 10.1007/s13524-015-0421-2.
In this analysis, guided by an evolutionary framework, we investigate how the human genome as a whole interacts with historical period, age, and physical activity to influence body mass index (BMI). The genomic influence is estimated by (1) heritability or the proportion of variance in BMI explained by genome-wide genotype data, and (2) the random effects or the best linear unbiased predictors (BLUPs) of genome-wide association studies (GWAS) data on BMI. Data were used from the Framingham Heart Study (FHS) in the United States. The study was initiated in 1948, and the obesity data were collected repeatedly over the subsequent decades. The analyses draw analysis samples from a pool of >8,000 individuals in the FHS. The hypothesis testing based on Pitman test, permutation Pitman test, F test, and permutation F test produces three sets of significant findings. First, the genomic influence on BMI is substantially larger after the mid-1980s than in the few decades before the mid-1980s within each age group of 21-40, 41-50, 51-60, and >60. Second, the genomic influence on BMI weakens as one ages across the life course, or the genomic influence on BMI tends to be more important during reproductive ages than after reproductive ages within each of the two historical periods. Third, within the age group of 21-50 and not in the age group of >50, the genomic influence on BMI among physically active individuals is substantially smaller than the influence on those who are not physically active. In summary, this study provides evidence that the influence of human genome as a whole on obesity depends on historical period, age, and level of physical activity.
在本分析中,我们以一个进化框架为指导,研究人类基因组作为一个整体如何与历史时期、年龄和身体活动相互作用,以影响体重指数(BMI)。基因组影响通过以下方式估计:(1)遗传力,即全基因组基因型数据所解释的BMI方差比例;(2)全基因组关联研究(GWAS)数据中关于BMI的随机效应或最佳线性无偏预测值(BLUPs)。数据来自美国的弗雷明汉心脏研究(FHS)。该研究始于1948年,随后几十年中反复收集肥胖数据。分析从FHS中8000多名个体的样本库中抽取分析样本。基于皮特曼检验、置换皮特曼检验、F检验和置换F检验的假设检验产生了三组显著结果。首先,在21 - 40、41 - 50、51 - 60和>60岁的每个年龄组中,20世纪80年代中期之后基因组对BMI的影响比80年代中期之前的几十年显著更大。其次,随着年龄增长,基因组对BMI的影响在整个生命过程中减弱,或者说在两个历史时期中的每一个时期内,基因组对BMI的影响在生殖年龄期间往往比生殖年龄之后更重要。第三,在21 - 50岁年龄组而非>50岁年龄组中,身体活跃个体的基因组对BMI的影响显著小于对不活跃个体的影响。总之,本研究提供了证据表明人类基因组作为一个整体对肥胖的影响取决于历史时期、年龄和身体活动水平。