Abstract

BackgroundFat mass and obesity-associated (FTO) gene has been under close investigation since the discovery of its high impact on the obesity status in 2007 by a range of publications. Recent report on its implication in adipocytes underscored its molecular and functional mechanics in pathology. Still, the population specific features of the locus structure have not been approached in detail.MethodsWe analyzed the population specific haplotype profiles of FTO genomic locus identified by Genome Wide Association Studies (GWAS) for the high obesity risk by examining eighteen 1000G populations from 4 continental groups. The GWAS SNPs cluster is located in the FTO gene intron 1 spanning around 70 kb.ResultsWe reconstructed the ancestral state of the locus, which comprised low-risk major allele found in all populations, and two minor risk-associated alleles, each one specific for African and European populations, correspondingly. The locus structure and its allele frequency distribution underscore the high risk allele frequency specifically for the European population. South Asian populations have the second highest frequency of risk alleles, while East Asian populations have the lowest. African population-specific minor allele was only partially risk-associated. All of the GWAS SNPs considered are manifested by low risk alleles as reference (major) ones (p > 0.5) in each of the continental groups. Strikingly, rs1421085, recently reported as a causal SNP, was found to be monomorphic in ancestral (African) populations, implying possible selection sweep in the course of its rapid fixation, as reported previously.ConclusionThe observations underscore varying FTO -linked risk in the manifestation of population specific epidemiology of genetically bound obesity. The results imply that the FTO locus is one of the major genetic determinants for obesity risk from GWAS SNPs set.

Highlights

  • Assessment of genetic risk to being overweight is the high priority task actively pursued in studies due to a wide spread epidemiological problem of obesity in many countries

  • The series of works on genetic risk assessment by Genome Wide Association Studies (GWAS) published in 2007 [1,2,3,4] underscored Fat mass and obesity-associated (FTO) as the

  • The FTO gene is expressed in a broad range of tissues since it belongs to housekeeping genes class and maintains CpG islands at promoters

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Summary

Introduction

Assessment of genetic risk to being overweight is the high priority task actively pursued in studies due to a wide spread epidemiological problem of obesity in many countries. The series of works on genetic risk assessment by GWAS published in 2007 [1,2,3,4] underscored FTO as the. The FTO gene is expressed in a broad range of tissues since it belongs to housekeeping genes class and maintains CpG islands at promoters. It spans more than 410 kb, which is atypically large for a housekeeping gene. FTO and surrounding genes are highly conserved across mammalian species. It is enriched with ultra conserved non-coding elements (UCNE): 10 UCNEs reside. The population specific features of the locus structure have not been approached in detail

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