Literature DB >> 8923163

Within birth cohort segregation analyses support recessive inheritance of body mass index in white and African-American families.

R A Price1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: We conducted segregation analyses of body mass index within birth cohort to determine whether previously reported support for recessive major gene inheritance in white and African-American families could have been due to higher rates of obesity in offspring than in parents, which are caused by temporal increases in obesity in recent decades.
DESIGN: Segregation analysis of family data. MEASUREMENT: The body mass index (BMI), adjusted for effects of gender, linear and non-linear effects of age, education and occupation of head of household, and clinic from which family was ascertained.
RESULTS: Segregation analysis results support a recessive mode of major gene inheritance of body mass index, even though we restricted our analysis to siblings born within the same post-1945 cohort. We also found support for substantial polygenic heritability of body mass index, which is consistent with a multigenic heritability. There was no significant heterogeneity between white and African-American families in support for a recessive mixed model. However, some differences in particular parameters were found, with higher gene frequency, lower polygenic heritability and a larger variance associated with the major gene model in African-Americans.
CONCLUSION: Our present segregation analysis shows that the recessive pattern, whether due to single or multiple genes, cannot be explained by inter-generational differences in obesity prevalence or family correlation. There was suggestive evidence of a higher major gene frequency and larger gene effect size in African-American families.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8923163

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord


  1 in total

1.  Genome-wide association of BMI in African Americans.

Authors:  Maggie C Y Ng; Jessica M Hester; Maria R Wing; Jiang Li; Jianzhao Xu; Pamela J Hicks; Bong H Roh; Lingyi Lu; Jasmin Divers; Carl D Langefeld; Barry I Freedman; Nichole D Palmer; Donald W Bowden
Journal:  Obesity (Silver Spring)       Date:  2011-06-23       Impact factor: 5.002

  1 in total

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