Abstract

Introduction: Obesity is highly heritable, and recent evidence demonstrates that obesity is associated with cognitive deficits, specifically working memory. However, the relationship between genetic risks for obesity and working memory is not clear. In addition, whether the effect of these genetic risks on working memory in children is mediated by increased body mass index (BMI) has not been elucidated.Methods: In order to test whether the polygenic risk score (PRS) for obesity in adulthood (adulthood-BMI-PRS) is associated with working memory at 8 years of age, and whether the effect is mediated by childhood BMI, in children from the general population, participants in the Hamamatsu Birth Cohort for Mothers and Children (HBC) study in Hamamatsu, Japan, underwent testing for association of adulthood-BMI-PRS with working memory. HBC data collection began in December 2007 and is ongoing. Adulthood-BMI-PRS values were generated using summary data from the recent genome-wide association study (GWAS) undertaken in Japan, and the significance of thresholds was calculated for each outcome. Outcomes measured included the working memory index (WMI) of Weschler Intelligence Scale-4 (WISC-IV) scores and the BMI at 8 years of age. Gene-set enrichment analysis was conducted to clarify the molecular basis common to adulthood-BMI and childhood-WMI. Mediation analysis was performed to assess whether childhood-BMI of children mediated the association between adulthood-BMI-PRS and working memory.Results: A total of 734 participants (377 males, 357 females) were analyzed. Adulthood-BMI-PRS was associated with lower childhood-WMI (β[SE], −1.807 [0.668]; p = 0.010, corrected) of WISC-IV. Gene-set enrichment analyses found that regulation of neurotrophin Trk receptor signaling (β[SE], −2.020 [6.39]; p = 0.002, corrected), negative regulation of GTPase activity (β[SE], 2.001 [0.630]; p = 0.002, corrected), and regulation of gene expression epigenetic (β[SE], −2.119 [0.664]; p = 0.002, corrected) were enriched in BMI in adulthood and WMI in childhood. Mediation analysis showed that there is no mediation effect of childhood-BMI between the adulthood-BMI-PRS and working memory deficits in children.Conclusion: Adulthood-BMI-PRS was associated with working memory among children in the general population. These genetic risks were not mediated by the childhood-BMI itself and were directly associated with working memory deficits.

Highlights

  • IntroductionRecent evidence demonstrates that obesity is associated with cognitive deficits, working memory

  • Obesity is highly heritable, and recent evidence demonstrates that obesity is associated with cognitive deficits, working memory

  • polygenic risk scores (PRSs) was generated by PRSice-2 (Choi and O’Reilly, 2019) using a recent body mass index (BMI)-genome-wide association study (GWAS) in the Japanese adult population as a discovery cohort1 (Akiyama et al, 2017)

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Summary

Introduction

Recent evidence demonstrates that obesity is associated with cognitive deficits, working memory. Whether the effect of these genetic risks on working memory in children is mediated by increased body mass index (BMI) has not been elucidated. Numerous neuroimaging studies have found structural alterations in obese children (Maayan et al, 2011; Veit et al, 2014; Sharkey et al, 2015; Saute et al, 2018); due to the limited sample size and methodological difference, results regarding the relationship between obesity, cortical thickness, and cognitive deficits have been inconsistent (Maayan et al, 2011; Sharkey et al, 2015; Saute et al, 2018). A recent large neuroimaging study reported that higher body mass index (BMI) was associated with lower working memory, and this association was mediated by reduced prefrontal cortex thickness in children (Laurent et al, 2019).

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