Association of the FTO Gene With BMI
Citations Over TimeTop 1% of 2008 papers
Abstract
Variants in the FTO gene have been strongly associated with obesity in a very large sample (38,759) of diabetic and control subjects. To replicate these findings, the previously reported SNP in the FTO gene (rs9939609, T/A) was genotyped in 5,607 subjects from five different Utah studies. The studies included a random sample of the Utah population, families selected for aggregation of extreme thinness, families selected for severe obesity, a series of unrelated severe obesity subjects, and families participating in a 25-year longitudinal study of cardiovascular disease and aging. Results show a strong significant increase in the rs9939609 A allele frequency with increasing BMI (P < 0.0001). In the longitudinal study, FTO genotypes were significantly associated with BMI at a baseline exam, a 2(1/2)-year follow-up exam and a 25-year follow-up exam using an additive genetic model. The mean genotype difference in BMI ranged from 1.3 to 2.1 kg/m(2) across exams. The genotype difference in BMI means was established in youth, and at-risk subjects under age 20 at baseline had a significantly larger 25-year BMI increase (10.0 for A/A; 9.7 for A/T, and 8.5 kg/m(2) for T/T, P = 0.05). We conclude that the BMI increases associated with FTO genotypes begin in youth and are maintained throughout adulthood.
Related Papers
- → Effects of theFTOGene on Lifestyle Intervention Studies in Children(2009)28 cited
- → Interaction effects of FTO rs9939609 polymorphism and lifestyle factors on obesity indices in early adolescence(2019)27 cited
- → Association analysis of FTO gene polymorphisms rs9939609 and obesity risk among the adults: A systematic review and meta-analysis(2020)18 cited
- → Expression features of the ovine FTO gene and association between FTO polymorphism and tail fat deposition related-traits in Hu sheep(2022)17 cited
- [The study of FTO rs9939609-gene polymorphism in the Sverdlovsk Region].(2012)