4.6 Article

Heritability of metabolic syndrome traits in a large population-based sample

Journal

JOURNAL OF LIPID RESEARCH
Volume 54, Issue 10, Pages 2914-2923

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1194/jlr.P041673

Keywords

genetics; lipids; cholesterol; obesity; BMI; cardiovascular; diabetes; sex difference; family study; twin study

Funding

  1. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research [56-464-14192, 400-03-330, 480-04-004, 400-07-080, 911-09-032]
  2. Netherlands Organization for Health Research and Development [ZonMW 31160008]
  3. EMGO+ Institute for Health and Care Research
  4. Neuroscience Campus Amsterdam
  5. Center for Medical Systems Biology (CMSB)
  6. BBRMI-NL [184.021.007]
  7. National Institutes of Health [5R37-DA-018673-03, 4R37-DA-018673-06]
  8. FP7 ENGAGE [FP7-HEALTH-F4-2007-201413]
  9. European Research Council [230374-GMI, 284167]

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Heritability estimates of metabolic syndrome traits vary widely across studies. Some studies have suggested that the contribution of genes may vary with age or sex. We estimated the heritability of 11 metabolic syndrome-related traits and height as a function of age and sex in a large population-based sample of twin families (N = 2,792-27,021, for different traits). A moderate-to-high heritability was found for all traits [from H-2 = 0.47 (insulin) to H-2 = 0.78 (BMI)]. The broad-sense heritability (H-2) showed little variation between age groups in women; it differed somewhat more in men (e. g., for glucose, H-2 = 0.61 in young females, H-2 = 0.56 in older females, H-2 = 0.64 in young males, and H-2 = 0.27 in older males). While nonadditive genetic effects explained little variation in the younger subjects, nonadditive genetic effects became more important at a greater age. Our findings show that in an unselected sample (age range, similar to 18-98 years), the genetic contribution to individual differences in metabolic syndrome traits is moderate to large in both sexes and across age.(jlr) Although the prevalence of the metabolic syndrome has greatly increased in the past decades due to lifestyle changes, our study indicates that most of the variation in metabolic syndrome traits between individuals is due to genetic differences.

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