1. Are MTHFR C677T and MTRR A66G Polymorphisms Associated with Overweight/Obesity Risk? From a Case-Control to a Meta-Analysis of 30,327 Subjects
- Author
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Shujun Fan, Yanxun Wang, Miao He, Da Wang, Jian Wei, Bo-Yi Yang, Xueyuan Zhi, Quanmei Zheng, Guifan Sun, and Yinuo Wang
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,China ,obesity ,MTRR ,Population ,Overweight ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Article ,Catalysis ,polymorphism ,lcsh:Chemistry ,Inorganic Chemistry ,Asian People ,Genetic model ,medicine ,Humans ,overweight ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,education ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,Molecular Biology ,Genetic Association Studies ,Methylenetetrahydrofolate Reductase (NADPH2) ,Spectroscopy ,Genetics ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,Organic Chemistry ,Case-control study ,General Medicine ,(Methionine synthase) reductase ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Obesity ,Computer Science Applications ,Ferredoxin-NADP Reductase ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,lcsh:QD1-999 ,Case-Control Studies ,Methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase ,MTHFR ,biology.protein ,Female ,medicine.symptom - Abstract
Several studies have examined the associations of methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) C677T and methionine synthase reductase (MTRR) A66G polymorphisms with being overweight/obesity. However, the results are still controversial. We therefore conducted a case-control study (517 cases and 741 controls) in a Chinese Han population and then performed a meta-analysis by combining previous studies (5431 cases and 24,896 controls). In our case-control study, the MTHFR C677T polymorphism was not significantly associated with being overweight/obesity when examining homozygous codominant, heterozygous codominant, dominant, recessive and allelic genetic models. The following meta-analysis confirmed our case-control results. Heterogeneity was minimal in the overall analysis, and sensitivity analyses and publication bias tests indicated that the meta-analytic results were reliable. Similarly, both the case-control study and meta-analysis found no significant association between the MTRR A66G polymorphism and being overweight/obesity. However, sensitivity analyses showed that the associations between the MTRR A66G polymorphism and being overweight/obesity became significant in the dominant, heterozygous codominant and allelic models after excluding our case-control study. The results from our case-control study and meta-analysis suggest that both of the two polymorphisms are not associated with being overweight/obesity. Further large-scale population-based studies, especially for the MTRR A66G polymorphism, are still needed to confirm or refute our findings.
- Published
- 2015
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