Rhiannon M Armitage, Vasiliki Iatridi, Darya Gaysina, Hely Tuorila, Martin R Yeomans, Jaakko Kaprio, Stephanie Zellers
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We estimated the contribution of additive genetic (A), nonadditive genetic (D), shared (C), and unshared environmental factors (E) in the variance and covariance of sweet-liking (defined ordinally through sweet-liking status and continuously) with related traits to see if they share similar proportions of genetic and environmental factors. Model-fitting indicated 30-48% of the variability in sweet-liking was attributed to (A) additive genetic factors and 52-70% to (E) environmental exposures not shared by siblings. Importantly, such AE models consistently fit best, regardless of sex, cohort, or sweet-liking assessment method. Broadly, correlations between sweet-liking and behavioral, eating, and personality measures were modest (-0.19 to 0.21), mostly positive and largely driven by shared genetic rather than environmental factors, with the strongest relationship seen for reported liking, consumption-frequency and craving for sweet foods. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
减少糖的摄入是全球卫生政策和膳食指南的一个关键组成部分。然而,个体在喜欢甜食方面存在很大差异,通常以喜欢甜食的状态为特征(极端喜欢甜食者,中等喜欢甜食者和不喜欢甜食者),然而这些类别的遗传性仍未被探索。来自芬兰(FinnTwin12; n = 468; 60%为女性,年龄21-24岁)和英国(TwinsUK; n = 967; 90%为女性,年龄18-81岁)的同卵和异卵双胞胎对他们对20% (w/v)蔗糖溶液的喜爱程度和感知强度进行了评分,报告了他们对食物和饮料的喜爱程度和消费频率,并完成了额外的行为、饮食和性格测试。我们估计了加性遗传因素(A)、非加性遗传因素(D)、共享环境因素(C)和非共享环境因素(E)对喜甜(通过喜甜状态依次定义并连续定义)与相关性状的方差和协方差的贡献,看看它们是否具有相似的遗传和环境因素比例。模型拟合表明,30-48%的喜欢甜食的变异归因于(A)加性遗传因素,52-70%归因于(E)兄弟姐妹之间没有共同的环境暴露。重要的是,这样的AE模型始终是最适合的,无论性别,队列,或甜的喜好评估方法。总的来说,喜欢吃甜食与行为、饮食和性格之间的相关性不大(-0.19到0.21),大部分是正相关的,主要是由共同的遗传因素而不是环境因素驱动的,其中最强烈的关系是报告的喜欢、消费频率和对甜食的渴望。我们证明,非共享环境调节了喜欢甜食的个体差异,以及大量的遗传成分,这些遗传成分部分与报告的喜欢、消费频率和对甜食的渴望有关。
Genetic and Environmental Influences on Sweet Taste Liking and Related Traits: New Insights from Twin Cohorts.
Reducing sugar intake is a key component of global health policies and dietary guidelines. However, individuals vary substantially in sweet-liking, commonly characterized by sweet-liking status (extreme sweet-likers, moderate sweet-likers, and sweet-dislikers), yet the heritability of these categories remains unexplored. Monozygotic and dizygotic twins from Finland (FinnTwin12; n = 468; 60% female, aged 21-24) and the UK (TwinsUK; n = 967; 90% female, aged 18-81) rated their liking and perceived intensity of a 20% (w/v) sucrose solution, reported their liking and consumption-frequency of food and beverages and completed additional behavioral, eating and personality measures. We estimated the contribution of additive genetic (A), nonadditive genetic (D), shared (C), and unshared environmental factors (E) in the variance and covariance of sweet-liking (defined ordinally through sweet-liking status and continuously) with related traits to see if they share similar proportions of genetic and environmental factors. Model-fitting indicated 30-48% of the variability in sweet-liking was attributed to (A) additive genetic factors and 52-70% to (E) environmental exposures not shared by siblings. Importantly, such AE models consistently fit best, regardless of sex, cohort, or sweet-liking assessment method. Broadly, correlations between sweet-liking and behavioral, eating, and personality measures were modest (-0.19 to 0.21), mostly positive and largely driven by shared genetic rather than environmental factors, with the strongest relationship seen for reported liking, consumption-frequency and craving for sweet foods. We demonstrate that unshared environment modulates individual differences in sweet-liking alongside a substantial genetic component that is partly shared with reported liking, consumption-frequency and craving for sweet foods.
期刊介绍:
Behavior Genetics - the leading journal concerned with the genetic analysis of complex traits - is published in cooperation with the Behavior Genetics Association. This timely journal disseminates the most current original research on the inheritance and evolution of behavioral characteristics in man and other species. Contributions from eminent international researchers focus on both the application of various genetic perspectives to the study of behavioral characteristics and the influence of behavioral differences on the genetic structure of populations.