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Study reveals effects on body mass index of gene linked to heavy smoking

Image of a cigarette being smoked

Press release issued: 4 December 2014

A genetic variant which causes smokers to smoke more heavily has been shown to be associated with increased body mass index (BMI) – but only in those who have never smoked, according to new research led by the University of Bristol, UK and published today in PLOS Genetics.

It is likely that this finding has not come to light before because it has been masked by the effect of smoking, which acts to reduce BMI.

Professor Marcus Munafo from Bristol’s School of Experimental Psychology and colleagues studied a variant in the CHRNA5-A3-B4 gene cluster which is known to increase smoking heaviness.

They found that the variant is associated with lower BMI in current smokers, but higher in people who have never smoked.  This difference in effects suggests that the variant influences BMI in opposite directions – via  pathways other than smoking for those who have never smoked and by increasing the weight-reducing effects of smoking in those who smoke.

The reason for this association with BMI in never smokers is not yet understood.  It is known that this genetic variant alters response to nicotine, which is why it affects the number of cigarettes that an individual smokes.

Professor Munafo said: “One explanation for the association with BMI in never smokers is that the nicotinic acetylcholine receptors this particular gene codes for may play a more general role in our response to reward – which could include natural rewards such as food.”

This study also highlights the potential importance of accounting for environmental factors in genetic studies. The direct association between this genetic variant and BMI was only revealed when the study population was divided into never, former and current smokers.  Therefore, it is possible that there may be important genetic influences on health outcomes which have not yet been discovered because they are hidden by environmental differences between individuals.

This research was conducted by the Consortium for Causal Analysis Research in Tobacco and Alcohol (CARTA), coordinated by the University of Bristol with the University of Glasgow and the Institute of Preventive Medicine, Bispebrjerg and Frederikberg Hospitals, Copenhagen, using data on almost 150,000 individuals from 29 individual studies.

Paper

‘Stratification by smoking status reveals an association of CHRNA5-A3-B4 genotype with body mass index in never smokers’ by Taylor et al in PLOS Genetics

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