Lack of evidence for a major gene in the Mendelian transmission of BMI in Chinese

Objectives: To determine the heritability of BMI and to examine the mode of inheritance of BMI variation in Chinese. Research Methods and Procedures: Familial correlation and complex segregation analyses for BMI were undertaken in a Chinese sample composed of 392 nuclear families, with 1190 total in...

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Veröffentlicht in:Obesity (Silver Spring, Md.) Md.), 2004-12, Vol.12 (12), p.1967-1973
Hauptverfasser: Liu, P.Y, Li, Y.M, Li, M.X, Malkin, I, Qin, Y.J, Chen, X.D, Liu, Y.J, Deng, H.W
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objectives: To determine the heritability of BMI and to examine the mode of inheritance of BMI variation in Chinese. Research Methods and Procedures: Familial correlation and complex segregation analyses for BMI were undertaken in a Chinese sample composed of 392 nuclear families, with 1190 total individuals. Results: A moderate heritability was found for BMI (h2 = 0.419‐0.492). The obtained results do not support a major gene for BMI in our samples. BMI may be inherited in a complex and non‐Mendelian manner in Chinese. Discussion: The findings of this study suggest that identification of specific genes for BMI in Chinese, at least within the same data set, is a serious challenge because of the lack of evidence of a major gene for BMI in our Chinese sample.
ISSN:1071-7323
1930-7381
1550-8528
1930-739X
DOI:10.1038/oby.2004.247