4.8 Article

Polygenic Prediction of Weight and Obesity Trajectories from Birth to Adulthood

Journal

CELL
Volume 177, Issue 3, Pages 587-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2019.03.028

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Human Genome Research Institute [1K08HG010155]
  2. National Lipid Association
  3. Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard
  4. Wellcome Trust [202802/Z/16/Z, 102215/2/13/2]
  5. University of Bristol NIHR Biomedical Research Centre [S-BRC-1215-20011]
  6. MRC Integrative Epidemiology Unit [MC_UU_12013/3]
  7. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute [HL127564]
  8. Ofer and Shelly Nemirovsky Research Scholar Award from Massachusetts General Hospital
  9. UM1 award from the National Human Genome Research Institute [HG008895]
  10. NIH [DK088661, DK090956, DK040561]
  11. Merck Research Laboratories
  12. Ethicon Endo-Surgery
  13. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) [HHSN268201300025C, HHSN268201300026C, HHSN268201300027C, HHSN268201300028C, HHSN268201300029C, HHSN268200900041C]
  14. National Institute on Aging (NIA)
  15. NIA [AG0005]
  16. NHLBI [AG0005]
  17. Gene Environment Association Studies (GENEVA) through National Human Genome Research Institute [U01-HG004729, U01-HG04424, U01-HG004446]
  18. UK Medical Research Council
  19. University of Bristol
  20. MRC [MC_UU_00011/1, MC_UU_12013/3] Funding Source: UKRI

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Severe obesity is a rapidly growing global health threat. Although often attributed to unhealthy lifestyle choices or environmental factors, obesity is known to be heritable and highly polygenic; the majority of inherited susceptibility is related to the cumulative effect of many common DNA variants. Here we derive and validate a new polygenic predictor comprised of 2.1 million common variants to quantify this susceptibility and test this predictor in more than 300,000 individuals ranging from middle age to birth. Among middle-aged adults, we observe a 13-kg gradient in weight and a 25-fold gradient in risk of severe obesity across polygenic score deciles. In a longitudinal birth cohort, we note minimal differences in birth weight across score deciles, but a significant gradient emerged in early childhood and reached 12 kg by 18 years of age. This new approach to quantify inherited susceptibility to obesity affords new opportunities for clinical prevention and mechanistic assessment.

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