PLoS ONE (Jan 2020)

Acanthosis nigricans as a composite marker of cardiometabolic risk and its complex association with obesity and insulin resistance in Mexican American children.

  • Juan C Lopez-Alvarenga,
  • Geetha Chittoor,
  • Solomon F D Paul,
  • Sobha Puppala,
  • Vidya S Farook,
  • Sharon P Fowler,
  • Roy G Resendez,
  • Joselin Hernandez-Ruiz,
  • Alvaro Diaz-Badillo,
  • David Salazar,
  • Doreen D Garza,
  • Donna M Lehman,
  • Srinivas Mummidi,
  • Rector Arya,
  • Christopher P Jenkinson,
  • Jane L Lynch,
  • Ralph A DeFronzo,
  • John Blangero,
  • Daniel E Hale,
  • Ravindranath Duggirala

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0240467
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 10
p. e0240467

Abstract

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AimAcanthosis nigricans (AN) is a strong correlate of obesity and is considered a marker of insulin resistance (IR). AN is associated with various other cardiometabolic risk factors (CMRFs). However, the direct causal relationship of IR with AN in obesity has been debated. Therefore, we aimed to examine the complex causal relationships among the troika of AN, obesity, and IR in Mexican Americans (MAs).MethodsWe used data from 670 non-diabetic MA children, aged 6-17 years (49% girls). AN (prevalence 33%) severity scores (range 0-5) were used as a quasi-quantitative trait (AN-q) for analysis. We used the program SOLAR for determining phenotypic, genetic, and environmental correlations between AN-q and CMRFs (e.g., BMI, HOMA-IR, lipids, blood pressure, hs-C-reactive protein (CRP), and Harvard physical fitness score (PFS)). The genetic and environmental correlations were subsequently used in mediation analysis (AMOS program). Model comparisons were made using goodness-of-fit indexes.ResultsHeritability of AN-q was 0.75 (pConclusionOur study suggests that obesity explains the association of IR with AN, but no causal relationship between IR and AN in Mexican American children.