Journal of Lipid Research (Sep 2009)

Genetic and environmental influences on factors associated with cardiovascular disease and the metabolic syndrome

  • Sonya J. Elder,
  • Alice H. Lichtenstein,
  • Anastassios G. Pittas,
  • Susan B. Roberts,
  • Paul J. Fuss,
  • Andrew S. Greenberg,
  • Megan A. McCrory,
  • Thomas J. Bouchard, Jr.,
  • Edward Saltzman,
  • Michael C. Neale

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 50, no. 9
pp. 1917 – 1926

Abstract

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The relative influence of genetics and the environment on factors associated with cardiovascular disease (CVD) and metabolic syndrome (MetS) remains unclear. We performed model-fitting analyses to quantify genetic, common environmental, and unique environmental variance components of factors associated with CVD and MetS [waist circumference, blood pressure, fasting plasma glucose and insulin, homeostatic model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR), and fasting plasma lipids] in adult male and female monozygotic twins reared apart or together. We also investigated whether MetS components share common influences. Plasma cholesterol and triglyceride concentrations were highly heritable (56–77%, statistically significant). Waist circumference, plasma glucose and insulin, HOMA-IR, and blood pressure were moderately heritable (43–57%, statistically significant). Unique environmental factors contributed to the variance of all variables (20–38%, perforce statistically significant). Common environmental factors contributed 23, 30, and 42% (statistically significant) of the variance of waist circumference, systolic blood pressure, and plasma glucose, respectively. Two shared factors influenced MetS components; one influenced all components except HDL cholesterol, another influenced only lipid (triglyceride and HDL cholesterol) concentrations. These results suggest that genetic variance has a dominant influence on total variance of factors associated with CVD and MetS and support the proposal of one or more underlying pathologies of MetS.

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