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Using genetic variation to disentangle the complex relationship between food intake and health outcomes
Authors:Nicola Pirastu  Ciara McDonnell  Eryk J Grzeszkowiak  Ninon Mounier  Fumiaki Imamura  Jordi Merino  Felix R Day  Jie Zheng  Nele Taba  Maria Pina Concas  Linda Repetto  Katherine A Kentistou  Antonietta Robino  Tnu Esko  Peter K Joshi  Krista Fischer  Ken K Ong  Tom R Gaunt  Zoltn Kutalik  John R B Perry  James F Wilson
Abstract:Diet is considered as one of the most important modifiable factors influencing human health, but efforts to identify foods or dietary patterns associated with health outcomes often suffer from biases, confounding, and reverse causation. Applying Mendelian randomization in this context may provide evidence to strengthen causality in nutrition research. To this end, we first identified 283 genetic markers associated with dietary intake in 445,779 UK Biobank participants. We then converted these associations into direct genetic effects on food exposures by adjusting them for effects mediated via other traits. The SNPs which did not show evidence of mediation were then used for MR, assessing the association between genetically predicted food choices and other risk factors, health outcomes. We show that using all associated SNPs without omitting those which show evidence of mediation, leads to biases in downstream analyses (genetic correlations, causal inference), similar to those present in observational studies. However, MR analyses using SNPs which have only a direct effect on the exposure on food exposures provided unequivocal evidence of causal associations between specific eating patterns and obesity, blood lipid status, and several other risk factors and health outcomes.
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