Genetic and environmental influences on infant anthropometry at birth and four months of life: evidence from singleton and twin data in the HEALS and earlyFOOD projects
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2023
Abstract:
Prenatal and postnatal developmental outcomes are associated with newborn
survival and respiratory health and are determined by complex interactions between
genes and the environment. However, the contribution of genetic dominance
has been scarcely investigated. We aimed to investigate the genetic and
environmental influences on infant weight, length, and head circumference in
singleton and twin infants at birth and four months of life, using both traditional
and behavioral genetics approaches accounting for genetic dominance.
A total of 173 newborns (65 singletons and 54 twin pairs) were consecutively
recruited within the HEALS and earlyFOOD projects. At birth and four months
of life, developmental outcomes were expressed as standard deviation scores
(z-scores), and information about maternal and family factors was collected using
questionnaires. We first considered singletons and a randomly selected twin
for each pair and run linear regression models at birth and four months of life
for each outcome. Then, we considered the twin pairs and estimated behavioral
genetic models to disentangle the contribution of additive genetic effects (A),
genetic dominance (D), shared (C) and unique (E) environmental influences.
In regression analyses, twin births were significantly associated with lower outcomes
at birth (p < 0.05) and fertility treatment was significantly associated with
higher birth length (? = 0.58, p = 0.026). ACDE models highlighted significant
percentages of variance explained by additive genetic factors (23 to 29%). Significant
percentages of variance explained by shared environmental factors were
observed at four months of life for weight (43%, p = 0.029) and head circumference
(50%, p = 0.004). A significant percentage of variance explained by dominance
genetic factors was observed for length at birth (37%, p = 0.037). The joint assessment of additive and non-additive genetic effects, together with
shared and unique environmental influences, provides new insights into the
study of the determinants of respiratory-related developmental outcomes such
as infant weight, length, and head circumference.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Respiratory-related developmental outcomes;; exposome; genome; infants; twins
Elenco autori:
Fasola, Salvatore; Tagliaferro, Sofia; Gagliardo, ROSALIA PAOLA; Baldacci, Sandra; Maio, Sara; LA GRUTTA, Stefania; Viegi, Giovanni; Montalbano, Laura; Malizia, Velia
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