Genetic and environmental influences on blood pressure and body mass index in Han Chinese: a twin study

被引:0
|
作者
Ting Wu
Harold Snieder
Liming Li
Weihua Cao
Siyan Zhan
Jun Lv
Wenjing Gao
Xiaoling Wang
Xiuhua Ding
Yonghua Hu
机构
[1] School of Public Health,Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics
[2] Peking University Health Science Center,Department of Epidemiology
[3] Unit of Genetic Epidemiology and Bioinformatics,Department of Pediatrics
[4] University Medical Center Groningen,undefined
[5] University of Groningen,undefined
[6] Georgia Prevention Institute,undefined
[7] Medical College of Georgia,undefined
来源
Hypertension Research | 2011年 / 34卷
关键词
blood pressure; heritability; interaction; obesity; twin;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The familial aggregation of blood pressure (BP) may be partly due to the familial aggregation of obesity, caused by genetic and/or environmental factors that influence both. Gene–obesity interactions are expected to result in different heritability estimates for BP at different obesity levels. However, the latter hypothesis has never been tested. The present study included 1243 monozygotic and 833 dizygotic Han Chinese twins (mean±s.d. age: 37.81±9.82; range: 19.1–81.4) from the Chinese National Twin Registry. Body mass index (BMI) was used as the index of general obesity. The outcome measures were systolic BP (SBP) and diastolic BP (DBP). Quantitative genetic modeling was performed using Mx software. The SBP and DBP heritabilities were 46 and 30%, respectively. The positive correlations of BMI with SBP (r=0.26) and with DBP (r=0.27) were largely due to genetic factors (approximately 85%). Genetic factors, which also influence BMI, account for 6 and 7% of the total variance for SBP and DBP, respectively. The gene–obesity interaction analysis showed that both common and unique environmental influences on SBP increased with increasing levels of BMI, resulting in a lower heritability at higher BMI levels, whereas for DBP the heritability remained unchanged at higher BMI levels. Our results suggest that higher BMIs may reduce SBP heritability through a larger impact of environmental effects. These conclusions may be valuable for gene-finding studies.
引用
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页码:173 / 179
页数:6
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