Abstract

Disruption of circadian rhythms and variations in the FTO gene may interfere with energy homeostasis and play a role in the development of obesity. The current study assessed the association of common polymorphisms in the CLOCK and FTO genes with standardized body mass index scores (BMI z-scores) and their potential modification of the impact of a culinary nutrition and physical activity intervention in school-age children. Anthropometric measurements were collected in 121 children at the baseline and one-year follow-up of a controlled trial of a school-based culinary nutrition and physical activity intervention. Genotypes of the CLOCK polymorphism (rs1801260) and the FTO polymorphism (rs9939609) were obtained from buccal swabs. Linear mixed-effects regression was applied to evaluate the genetic association and adjust for clusters within families and schools. In our participants, obesity affected 6.6% (8/121) of the children at the baseline and 6.4% (7/109) of the children at the follow-up. The associations between the age- and sex-adjusted BMI z-scores and the two polymorphisms did not reach statistically significance. Yet, sex potentially modified the association between rs1801260 and BMI z-scores. In girls, the G allele carriers had a higher BMI z-scores at the baseline and the follow-up. These polymorphisms did not modify the effect of our culinary nutrition and physical activity intervention on BMI z-scores. Sex is a potential modifier for the association between the CLOCK polymorphism, rs1801260, and BMI z-scores in school-age children. Further investigation is warranted to delineate the sex-dependent role of the CLOCK polymorphisms in the development of childhood obesity.

Highlights

  • The circadian system plays a role in the regulation of metabolic homeostasis

  • The primary objective of this study was to investigate the association of the common clock circadian regulator (CLOCK) and fat mass and obesity-associated (FTO) single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP), rs1801260 and rs9939609, with body mass index (BMI) in school-age children from two school districts in one Northern Colorado county who participated in a culinary nutrition and physical activity intervention

  • This study explored the potential association of a CLOCK SNP and a FTO SNP with BMI zscores and their modification effect on the culinary nutrition and physical activity intervention in a group of school-age children

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Summary

Introduction

The circadian system plays a role in the regulation of metabolic homeostasis. Human studies and animal models have implicated that disruption of circadian rhythms affects the sleep-wake cycle, eating behaviors, insulin sensitivity, and lipid metabolism [1, 2]. Circadian desynchrony may be involved in the development of obesity and metabolic disorders. CLOCK variant rs1801260 and BMI in children.

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