Objective:Polymorphisms in the NAMPT gene, which encodes the adipocytokine visfatin/nicotinamide phosphorybosil transferase (NAMPT), affect the circulating visfatin/NAMPT levels and are associated with obesity and cardiovascular diseases. However, no study has tested the hypothesis that NAMPT haplotypes could affect visfatin/NAMPT levels in case of childhood obesity. We investigated the effects of traditional metabolic risk factors (MRFs) and NAMPT polymorphisms T/C (rs1319501) and A/G (rs3801266) or haplotypes on visfatin/NAMPT levels in obese children and adolescents, and whether NAMPT polymorphisms and/or haplotypes are associated with susceptibility to childhood obesity. Methods: We studied 175 control, 99 obese and 82 obese with ≥3 MRFs children and adolescents. Genotypes were determined by a Taqman allele discrimination assay and real-time PCR. The plasma visfatin/NAMPT level was measured using an enzyme immunoassay. Results: Obese children and adolescents with ≥3 MRFs had higher plasma visfatin/NAMPT levels in comparison with control children and adolescents (P<0.05). Although positive associations were observed between visfatin/NAMPT and body mass index (rs=0.157; P=0.034) as well as visfatin/NAMPT and waist circumference (rs=0.192; P=0.011), visfatin/NAMPT and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol were inversely associated (rs=-0.162; P=0.031). No significant differences in genotype, allele or haplotype frequency distributions for the studied polymorphisms were found when the three groups were compared. However, higher plasma visfatin/NAMPT levels were found in control and obese subjects carrying the GG genotype for the A/G (rs3801266) polymorphism (P<0.05) but not in obese children with ≥3 MRFs. Moreover, control subjects carrying the 'T-G' haplotype showed higher plasma visfatin/NAMPT levels. NAMPT genotypes or haplotypes were not associated with childhood obesity. Conclusions: Obesity in children with ≥3 MRFs increases plasma visfatin/NAMPT levels, and this marker was associated with body mass index and waist circumference. The A/G polymorphism and NAMPT haplotypes affect plasma visfatin/NAMPT levels in controls but not in obese children with ≥3 MRFs. These results suggest that obesity and MRFs are more influential than genetic polymorphisms in the determination of visfatin/NAMPT levels in obese children. Further research is necessary to explain why the GG genotype is not associated with increased visfatin/NAMPT levels in obese children with ≥3 MRFs.
CITATION STYLE
Belo, V. A., Luizon, M. R., Lacchini, R., Miranda, J. A., Lanna, C. M. M., Souza-Costa, D. C., & Tanus-Santos, J. E. (2015). The effects of NAMPT haplotypes and metabolic risk factors on circulating visfatin/NAMPT levels in childhood obesity. International Journal of Obesity, 39(1), 130–135. https://doi.org/10.1038/ijo.2013.173
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