Yam Phoebe, Albright Jody, VerHague Melissa, Gertz Erik R, Pardo-Manuel de Villena Fernando, Bennett Brian J
Integrative Genetics and Genomics Graduate Group, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA, United States.
Western Human Nutrition Research Center, Agricultural Research Service, US Department of Agriculture, Davis, CA, United States.
Front Genet. 2021 Feb 11;11:615012. doi: 10.3389/fgene.2020.615012. eCollection 2020.
Defined as chronic excessive accumulation of adiposity, obesity results from long-term imbalance between energy intake and expenditure. The mechanisms behind how caloric imbalance occurs are complex and influenced by numerous biological and environmental factors, especially genetics, and diet. Population-based diet recommendations have had limited success partly due to the wide variation in physiological responses across individuals when they consume the same diet. Thus, it is necessary to broaden our understanding of how individual genetics and diet interact relative to the development of obesity for improving weight loss treatment. To determine how consumption of diets with different macronutrient composition alter adiposity and other obesity-related traits in a genetically diverse population, we analyzed body composition, metabolic rate, clinical blood chemistries, and circulating metabolites in 22 strains of mice from the Collaborative Cross (CC), a highly diverse recombinant inbred mouse population, before and after 8 weeks of feeding either a high protein or high fat high sucrose diet. At both baseline and post-diet, adiposity and other obesity-related traits exhibited a broad range of phenotypic variation based on CC strain; diet-induced changes in adiposity and other traits also depended largely on CC strain. In addition to estimating heritability at baseline, we also quantified the effect size of diet for each trait, which varied by trait and experimental diet. Our findings identified CC strains prone to developing obesity, demonstrate the genotypic and phenotypic diversity of the CC for studying complex traits, and highlight the importance of accounting for genetic differences when making dietary recommendations.
肥胖被定义为脂肪过度慢性积累,是由能量摄入与消耗长期失衡所致。热量失衡发生的背后机制复杂,受众多生物和环境因素影响,尤其是基因和饮食。基于人群的饮食建议成效有限,部分原因是个体在食用相同饮食时生理反应差异很大。因此,有必要加深我们对个体基因与饮食如何相互作用影响肥胖发生的理解,以改善减肥治疗。为了确定食用不同宏量营养素组成的饮食如何改变基因多样化人群的肥胖及其他与肥胖相关的特征,我们分析了协作杂交(CC)的22个品系小鼠的身体组成、代谢率、临床血液化学指标和循环代谢物,CC是一个高度多样化的重组近交小鼠群体,在喂食高蛋白或高脂肪高蔗糖饮食8周前后进行了分析。在基线期和饮食后,基于CC品系,肥胖及其他与肥胖相关的特征均表现出广泛的表型变异;饮食诱导的肥胖及其他特征变化在很大程度上也取决于CC品系。除了估计基线期的遗传力,我们还量化了每种饮食对每个特征的效应大小,其因特征和实验饮食而异。我们的研究结果确定了易患肥胖的CC品系,证明了CC在研究复杂特征方面的基因型和表型多样性,并强调了在制定饮食建议时考虑基因差异的重要性。