Abstract

The rapid rise of obesity, type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) and cardiovascular disease (CVD) during the last few decades among South Asians has been largely attributed to a major shift in lifestyles including physical inactivity, unhealthy dietary patterns, and an overall pattern of sedentary lifestyle. Genetic predisposition to these cardiometabolic risk factors may have interacted with these obesogenic environments in determining the higher cardiometabolic disease prevalence. Based on the premise that gene-environment interactions cause obesity and cardiometabolic diseases, we systematically searched the literature and considered the knowledge gaps that future studies might fulfill. We identified only seven published studies that focused specifically on gene-environment interactions for cardiometabolic traits in South Asians, most of which were limited by relatively small sample and lack of replication. Some studies reported that the differences in metabolic response to higher physical activity and low caloric diet might be modified by genetic risk related to these cardiometabolic traits. Although studies on gene lifestyle interactions in cardiometabolic traits report significant interactions, future studies must focus on more precise assessment of lifestyle factors, investigation of a larger set of genetic variants and the application of powerful statistical methods to facilitate translatable approaches. Future studies should also be integrated with findings both using mechanistic studies through laboratory settings and randomized clinical trials for clinical outcomes.

Highlights

  • The rapid rise of obesity, type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) and cardiovascular disease (CVD) during the last few decades among South Asians has been largely attributed to a major shift in lifestyles including physical inactivity, unhealthy dietary patterns, and an overall pattern of sedentary lifestyle

  • Evidence shows that complex traits including obesity, cardiometabolic and CVD result from interaction between multiple genetic and environmental factors

  • The GWAS has led to identification of a number of genetic variants that associate with obesity, cardiometabolic and CVD traits, these genetic variants only explain a small phenotypic variation in these traits

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Summary

OBJECTIVE

In this review we intend to discuss the published studies in South Asians regarding gene and lifestyle factors including physical activity, smoking, and dietary patterns interactions in the development of obesity, cardiometabolic and CVD disease related biomarkers of insulin resistance, glucose metabolism, lipids, blood pressure, and inflammation

Methodology
97 BMI associated SNPs
Findings
CONCLUSIONS
Full Text
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