Statistical and biological gene-lifestyle interactions of MC4R and FTO with diet and physical activity on obesity: new effects on alcohol consumption

Author

Corella Piquer, Dolores

Ortega Azorín, Carolina

Sorlí, José V.

Covas Planells, María Isabel

Carrasco, Paula

Salas Salvadó, Jordi

Martínez-González, Miguel Ángel, 1957-

Arós, Fernando

Lapetra, José

Serra Majem, Lluís

Lamuela Raventós, Rosa Ma.

Gómez Gracia, Enrique

Fiol Sala, Miguel

Pintó Sala, Xavier

Ros Rahola, Emilio

Martí, Amelia

Coltell, Óscar

Ordovás, José María

Estruch Riba, Ramon

Publication date

2018-10-04T14:16:47Z

2018-10-04T14:16:47Z

2012-12-21

2018-10-04T14:16:48Z

Abstract

Background Fat mass and obesity (FTO) and melanocortin-4 receptor (MC4R) and are relevant genes associated with obesity. This could be through food intake, but results are contradictory. Modulation by diet or other lifestyle factors is also not well understood. Objective To investigate whether MC4R and FTO associations with body-weight are modulated by diet and physical activity (PA), and to study their association with alcohol and food intake. Methods Adherence to Mediterranean diet (AdMedDiet) and physical activity (PA) were assessed by validated questionnaires in 7,052 high cardiovascular risk subjects. MC4R rs17782313 and FTO rs9939609 were determined. Independent and joint associations (aggregate genetic score) as well as statistical and biological gene-lifestyle interactions were analyzed. Results FTO rs9939609 was associated with higher body mass index (BMI), waist circumference (WC) and obesity (P<0.05 for all). A similar, but not significant trend was found for MC4R rs17782313. Their additive effects (aggregate score) were significant and we observed a 7% per-allele increase of being obese (OR = 1.07; 95%CI 1.01-1.13). We found relevant statistical interactions (P<0.05) with PA. So, in active individuals, the associations with higher BMI, WC or obesity were not detected. A biological (non-statistical) interaction between AdMedDiet and rs9939609 and the aggregate score was found. Greater AdMedDiet in individuals carrying 4 or 3-risk alleles counterbalanced their genetic predisposition, exhibiting similar BMI (P = 0.502) than individuals with no risk alleles and lower AdMedDiet. They also had lower BMI (P = 0.021) than their counterparts with low AdMedDiet. We did not find any consistent association with energy or macronutrients, but found a novel association between these polymorphisms and lower alcohol consumption in variant-allele carriers (B+/−SE: −0.57+/−0.16 g/d per-score-allele; P = 0.001). Conclusion Statistical and biological interactions with PA and diet modulate the effects of FTO and MC4R polymorphisms on obesity. The novel association with alcohol consumption seems independent of their effects on BMI.

Document Type

Article
Published version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Consum d'alcohol; Obesitat; Exercici; Estils de vida; Drinking of alcoholic beverages; Obesity; Exercise; Lifestyles

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0052344

PLoS One, 2012, vol. 7, num. 12, p. e52344

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0052344

Rights

cc-by (c) Corella Piquer, Dolores et al., 2012

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es