학술논문

Disentangling the link between maternal influences on birth weight and disease risk in 36,211 genotyped mother–child pairs.
Document Type
Article
Source
Communications Biology. 2/12/2024, Vol. 7 Issue 1, p1-9. 9p.
Subject
*BIRTH weight
*FETAL growth retardation
*FETAL development
*LOW birth weight
*GENETIC pleiotropy
*INFANTS
*PREMATURE infants
*GRANGER causality test
Language
ISSN
2399-3642
Abstract
Epidemiological studies have robustly linked lower birth weight to later-life disease risks. These observations may reflect the adverse impact of intrauterine growth restriction on a child's health. However, causal evidence supporting such a mechanism in humans is largely lacking. Using Mendelian Randomization and 36,211 genotyped mother-child pairs from the FinnGen study, we assessed the relationship between intrauterine growth and five common health outcomes (coronary heart disease (CHD), hypertension, statin use, type 2 diabetes and cancer). We proxied intrauterine growth with polygenic scores for maternal effects on birth weight and took into account the transmission of genetic variants between a mother and a child in the analyses. We find limited evidence for contribution of normal variation in maternally influenced intrauterine growth on later-life disease. Instead, we find support for genetic pleiotropy in the fetal genome linking birth weight to CHD and hypertension. Our study illustrates the opportunities that data from genotyped parent-child pairs from a population-based biobank provides for addressing causality of maternal influences. A Mendelian Randomization study with 36,211 mother-child pairs indicates that maternal genetic variants, influencing a child's birth weight, impact the child's risk for common diseases through inheritance and not by effects on intrauterine growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]