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Metabolic liability for weight gain in early adulthood

Venkatesh L. Murthy, Jonathan D. Mosley, Andrew Perry, David R. Jacobs, Kahraman Tanrıverdi, Shilin Zhao, Konrad Teodor Sawicki, Mercedes R. Carnethon, John T. Wilkins, Matthew Nayor, Saumya Das, E. Dale Abel, Jane E. Freedman, Clary B. Clish, Ravi V. Shah

2024Cell Reports Medicine11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

While weight gain is associated with a host of chronic illnesses, efforts in obesity have relied on single "snapshots" of body mass index (BMI) to guide genetic and molecular discovery. Here, we study >2,000 young adults with metabolomics and proteomics to identify a metabolic liability to weight gain in early adulthood. Using longitudinal regression and penalized regression, we identify a metabolic signature for weight liability, associated with a 2.6% (2.0%–3.2%, p = 7.5 × 10 −19 ) gain in BMI over ≈20 years per SD higher score, after comprehensive adjustment. Identified molecules specified mechanisms of weight gain, including hunger and appetite regulation, energy expenditure, gut microbial metabolism, and host interaction with external exposure. Integration of longitudinal and concurrent measures in regression with Mendelian randomization highlights the complexity of metabolic regulation of weight gain, suggesting caution in interpretation of epidemiologic or genetic effect estimates traditionally used in metabolic research.

Topics & Concepts

Weight gainMendelian randomizationBody mass indexRegressionObesityWeight changeBiologyRegression analysisInternal medicineWeight lossBioinformaticsMedicineEndocrinologyGeneticsBody weightPsychologyGenotypeGenetic variantsGeneComputer scienceMachine learningPsychoanalysisDiet and metabolism studiesNutritional Studies and DietAdipose Tissue and Metabolism