4.6 Article

Sex differences in the genetic and environmental underpinnings of meat and plant preferences

期刊

FOOD QUALITY AND PREFERENCE
卷 98, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodqual.2021.104421

关键词

Food preferences; Food neophobia; Vegetarianism; Genetics; Twins

资金

  1. European Research Council (ERC) [StG-2015 680002-HBIS, 274521, 284385, 319403]
  2. Academy of Finland

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study examined the genetic and environmental factors influencing people's preferences for meats and plants, as well as their meat and plant neophobia, and vegetarianism/veganism. The research found correlations between childhood exposure to meats and plants and adult preferences, and sex differences in the heritability of these factors. Interestingly, different genes were found to influence men's and women's meat preferences, while abstention from meat (vegetarianism/veganism) was highly heritable at 76%.
People vary in the degree to which they enjoy eating meats versus plants. This paper examines the genetic and environmental roots of this variation, as well as the genetic and environmental roots of meat neophobia, plant neophobia, and vegetarianism/veganism. Using data from 9319 adult Finnish twins and siblings of twins (551 MZ, 861 DZ complete; 783 MZ, 2692 DZ incomplete twin pairs), we examine the degree to which recalled childhood exposure to meats and plants relates to adult preferences for the same meats and plants. We also investigate sex differences in the heritability of 1) meat and plant preferences, 2) childhood meat and plant consumption, 3) meat and plant neophobia, and the heritability of 4) vegetarianism/veganism. For both men and women, recalled childhood meat consumption correlated more strongly with current meat preferences than current plant preferences, and recalled childhood plant consumption correlated more strongly with current plant preferences than current meat preferences. We detected sex differences in the heritability of childhood meat consumption (h(men)(2) = 0.31, h(women)(2) = 0.11) and current meat preferences (h(men)(2) = 0.26, h(women)(2) = 0.51), but not childhood plant consumption (h(men)(2) = 0.41, h(women)(2) = 0.17), current plant preferences (h(men)(2) = 0.45, h(women)(2) = 0.53), meat neophobia (h(men)(2) = 0.48, h(women)(2) = 0.55) or plant neophobia (h(men)(2) = 0.56, h(women)(2) = 0.54). Further, different genes undergirded men's and women's meat preferences. Abstention from meat (i.e., vegetarianism/veganism) was 76% heritable. These results have implications for hypotheses of the developmental origins of dietary patterns and hypotheses for sex differences in meat consumption.

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