Frontiers in Genetics (Jan 2023)

Genetic heritability as a tool to evaluate the precision of 24-hour recall dietary questionnaire variables in UK Biobank

  • Joanne B. Cole,
  • Joanne B. Cole,
  • Joanne B. Cole,
  • Joanne B. Cole,
  • Joanne B. Cole,
  • Kenneth E. Westerman,
  • Kenneth E. Westerman,
  • Kenneth E. Westerman,
  • Alisa K. Manning,
  • Alisa K. Manning,
  • Alisa K. Manning,
  • Jose C. Florez,
  • Jose C. Florez,
  • Jose C. Florez,
  • Joel N. Hirschhorn,
  • Joel N. Hirschhorn,
  • Joel N. Hirschhorn

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2022.1070511
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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A variety of statistical approaches in nutritional epidemiology have been developed to enhance the precision of dietary variables derived from longitudinal questionnaires. Correlation with biomarkers is often used to assess the relative validity of these different approaches, however, validated biomarkers do not always exist and are costly and laborious to collect. We present a novel high-throughput approach which utilizes the modest but importantly non-zero influence of genetic variation on variation in dietary intake to compare different statistical transformations of dietary variables. Specifically, we compare the heritability of crude averages with Empirical Bayes weighted averages for 302 correlated dietary variables from multiple 24-hour recall questionnaires in 177 K individuals in UK Biobank. Overall, the crude averages for frequency of consumption are more heritable than their Empirical Bayes counterparts only when the reliability of that item across questionnaires is high (measured by intra-class correlation), otherwise, the Empirical Bayes approach (for both unreliably measured frequencies and for average quantities independent of reliability) leads to higher heritability estimates. We also find that the more heritable versions of each dietary variable lead to stronger underlying statistical associations with specific genetic loci, many of which have well-known mechanisms, further supporting heritability as an alternative metric for relative validity in nutritional epidemiology and beyond.

Keywords