Last updated:
Author(s):
Lena R Kaisinger, Katherine A Kentistou, Stasa Stankovic, Eugene J Gardner, Felix R Day, Yajie Zhao, Alexander Mörseburg, Christopher J Carnie, Guido Zagnoli-Vieira, Fabio Puddu, Stephen P Jackson, Stephen O'Rahilly, I Sadaf Farooqi, Laura Dearden, Lucas C Pantaleão, Susan E Ozanne, Ken K Ong, John R B Perry
Publish date:
2 August 2023
Journal:
Cell Genomics
PubMed ID:
37601970

Abstract

Obesity contributes substantially to the global burden of disease and has a significant heritable component. Recent large-scale exome sequencing studies identified several genes in which rare, protein-coding variants have large effects on adult body mass index (BMI). Here we extended such work by performing sex-stratified associations in the UK Biobank study (N∼420,000). We identified genes in which rare heterozygous loss-of-function increases adult BMI in women (DIDO1, PTPRG, and SLC12A5) and in men (SLTM), with effect sizes up to ∼8 kg/m2. This is complemented by analyses implicating rare variants in OBSCN and MADD for recalled childhood adiposity. The known functions of these genes, as well as findings of common variant genome-wide pathway enrichment analyses, suggest a role for neuron death, apoptosis, and DNA damage response mechanisms in the susceptibility to obesity across the life-course. These findings highlight the importance of considering sex-specific and life-course effects in the genetic regulation of obesity.

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Institution:
University of Cambridge, Great Britain

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