Author:
Yao Shi,Wu Hao,Bao Peng,Qian Long,Han Ji-Zhou,Wang Yan,Feng Si-Fan,Cai Yu-Jie,Guo Jing,Ke Xin,Shi Wei,Ma Fu-Bin,Liang Qiu-Hao,Dong Shan-Shan,Guo Yan,Zhu Dong-Li,Cui Li-Li
Abstract
AbstractFood preferences play a pivotal role in dietary choices and body weight regulation, yet the causal relationships and complex pathways linking food liking to obesity remain elusive. Here, we employed a two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis and pleiotropic analysis to explore the causalities and shared loci between 187 food preferences (N=161,625) and five obesity-related phenotypes (N=100,716 to 322,154). MR analysis revealed a causal association between two food-liking phenotypes and increased body mass index (BMI), specifically, onion liking (β, 0.286; 95% CI, 0.185 to 0.387;P= 2.80×10−8), and highly palatable food liking (β, 0.266; 95% CI, 0.140 to 0.391;P= 3.31×10−5). Multivariable MR analysis indicated that the impact of onion liking on BMI persisted even after conditioning on actual onion intake, suggesting a degree of independence in dietary preferences’ influence. Pleiotropic analysis under a composite null hypothesis detected 32 pleiotropic loci and six colocalized loci in these two trait pairs. Candidate pleiotropic genes associated with onion liking-BMI highlighted biological pathways primarily involved in the sensory perception of smell. These findings enhance our comprehension of the intricate relationship between food preferences and obesity.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory