The genetics of cross-sectional and longitudinal body mass index
Open Access
- 31 December 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in BMC Genomic Data
- Vol. 4 (S1) , S14
- https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2156-4-s1-s14
Abstract
There has been a lack of consistency in detecting chromosomal loci that are linked to obesity-related traits. This may be due, in part, to the phenotype definition. Many studies use a one-time, single measurement as a phenotype while one's weight often fluctuates considerably throughout adulthood. Longitudinal data from the Framingham Heart Study were used to derive alternative phenotypes that may lead to more consistent findings. Body mass index (BMI), a measurement for obesity, is known to increase with age and then plateau or decline slightly; the decline phase may represent a threshold or survivor effect. We propose to use the weight gain phase of BMI to derive phenotypes useful for linkage analysis of obesity. Two phenotypes considered in the present study are the average of and the slope of the BMI measurements in the gain phase (gain mean and gain slope). For comparison, we also considered the average of all BMI measurements available (overall mean). Linkage analysis using the gain mean phenotype exhibited two markers with LOD scores greater than 3, with the largest score of 3.52 on chromosome 4 at ATA2A03. In contrast, no LOD scores greater than 3 were observed when overall mean was used. The gain slope produced weak evidence for linkage on chromosome 4 with a multipoint LOD score of 1.77 at GATA8A05. Our analysis shows how omitting the decline phase of BMI in the definition of obesity phenotypes can result in evidence for linkage which might have been otherwise overlooked.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Genomewide Linkage Analysis of Body Mass Index across 28 Years of the Framingham Heart StudyAmerican Journal of Human Genetics, 2002
- The Human Obesity Gene Map: The 2001 UpdateObesity Research, 2002
- Quantitative-Trait-Locus Analysis of Body-Mass Index and of Stature, by Combined Analysis of Genome Scans of Five Finnish Study GroupsAmerican Journal of Human Genetics, 2001
- A Genome-Wide Scan for Abdominal Fat Assessed by Computed Tomography in the Québec Family StudyDiabetes, 2001
- A quantitative trait locus influencing BMI maps to the region of the beta-3 adrenergic receptor.Diabetes, 1999
- An Autosomal Genomic Scan for Loci Linked to Type II Diabetes Mellitus and Body-Mass Index in Pima IndiansAmerican Journal of Human Genetics, 1998
- Comprehensive Human Genetic Maps: Individual and Sex-Specific Variation in RecombinationAmerican Journal of Human Genetics, 1998
- Multipoint Quantitative-Trait Linkage Analysis in General PedigreesAmerican Journal of Human Genetics, 1998
- Parametric and nonparametric linkage analysis: a unified multipoint approach.1996