A Common Variant in the <i>FTO</i> Gene Is Associated with Body Mass Index and Predisposes to Childhood and Adult Obesity

2007 Science 4,387 citations

Abstract

Obesity is a serious international health problem that increases the risk of several common diseases. The genetic factors predisposing to obesity are poorly understood. A genome-wide search for type 2 diabetes–susceptibility genes identified a common variant in the FTO (fat mass and obesity associated) gene that predisposes to diabetes through an effect on body mass index (BMI). An additive association of the variant with BMI was replicated in 13 cohorts with 38,759 participants. The 16% of adults who are homozygous for the risk allele weighed about 3 kilograms more and had 1.67-fold increased odds of obesity when compared with those not inheriting a risk allele. This association was observed from age 7 years upward and reflects a specific increase in fat mass.

Keywords

ObesityBody mass indexFTO geneOdds ratioAlleleChildhood obesityDiabetes mellitusMedicineType 2 diabetesPolymorphism (computer science)OddsGenome-wide association studyGenetic predispositionInternal medicineGeneticsEndocrinologyGeneBiologyGenotypeOverweightSingle-nucleotide polymorphismLogistic regression

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
2007
Type
article
Volume
316
Issue
5826
Pages
889-894
Citations
4387
Access
Closed

External Links

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

4387
OpenAlex

Cite This

Timothy M. Frayling, Nicholas J. Timpson, Michael N. Weedon et al. (2007). A Common Variant in the <i>FTO</i> Gene Is Associated with Body Mass Index and Predisposes to Childhood and Adult Obesity. Science , 316 (5826) , 889-894. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1141634

Identifiers

DOI
10.1126/science.1141634