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Father's
Gene May Be
Responsible For Child Obesity
Excerpt
By Nicolle Charbonneau, HealthScoutNews Reporter
(HealthScoutNews)
-- Some dads may be giving their children a genetic one-way ticket
to Fat City.
A variation
of a gene inherited only from a father may raise a child's risk
of early-onset obesity, say French and American researchers in
the Aug. 13 issue of the journal Nature Genetics.
Previous studies
had suggested to the researchers that a gene variant called class
I INS VNTR might be linked to childhood obesity.
Every parent
passes on one copy, or allele, of a gene to a child. In this case,
either parent can pass along a class I INS VNTR or a class
III INS VNTR.
The researchers
studied genetic samples from 402 children who became obese before
age 6 and found that children who inherited the class I INS
VNTR variant from their fathers were 1.8 times more likely to
become obese in childhood.
However, inheriting
the class I INS VNTR variant from mothers did not seem
to raise the risk of obesity. "It's surprising that you'd
see a parent-of-origin effect. That's not a very common finding,"
says co-author Danièle Fallin, an assistant professor of
epidemiology at Johns Hopkins University's School of Public Health
in Baltimore, Md.
In the study,
which involved children of Mediterranean and central European
descent, Fallin and her colleagues found the frequency of the
class I INS VNTR allele put 65 percent to 70 percent of
children at risk of inheriting the gene variant.
"This
is a rather common allele," says Fallin. "If a lot of
people already have that allele, and it does confer some increased
risk when it comes from the father, then that could potentially
affect quite a few children." However, she says more studies
are needed of children from different populations.
The researchers
now can only speculate about how the gene variant affects childhood
obesity.
Fallin says,
"This gene region has previously been shown to regulate expression
of insulin. It's also been shown that during fetal development,
it looks like only the paternal copy of this region is expressed.
One working theory that we have is that if that's true, then it
may make sense that the father's genotype is actually influencing
things."
Fallin says
the finding will help scientists understand the mechanisms that
contribute to childhood obesity, especially what happens during
fetal development. "That can tell us ways that we may be
able to prevent [obesity] or treat children in ways so that the
complications that arise because of early-onset childhood obesity
can be dealt with sooner rather than later."
Fallin says
other studies have discovered rare gene mutations in disorders
primarily characterized by obesity, such as a deficiency in leptin,
a protein that seems to manage the body's supply of fat.
Dr. Barbara
Dennison, an associate professor of clinical pediatrics at Columbia
University in New York City, says several studies have suggested
that genetics play a role in childhood obesity.
"Overweight
parents are more likely to have overweight kids," says Dennison,
although she says non-genetic factors play a large role too. "Right
now, there's an epidemic going on in the United States, as well
as worldwide, and genetics hasn't changed," says Dennison.
Roughly 25
percent to 30 percent of U.S. children are obese, and the percentage
is rising steadily. Lack of exercise, eating too much or a diet
high in fats all are risk factors for childhood obesity, say experts.
Overweight
children are highly likely to be overweight adults and have a
higher lifetime risk of heart disease, diabetes, high blood pressure,
kidney problems and even certain cancers.
What To
Do:
For more information
about childhood obesity, check this publication from the
American Academy of Family Physicians.
The
National Institutes of Health provide information about the
health implications of obesity.
You can also
check the
Healthy Eating Healthy Living Program or
KidSource.com.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
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