Association of the leptin receptor rs1805134 polymorphism with obesity parameters, dietary intakes, and metabolic syndrome in Caucasian obese subjects

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Abstract

Background: some studies have evaluated the association of the rs1805134 genetic variant of the LEPR gene with obesity. Aims: the objective was to explore the association of the rs1805134 genetic variant of the LEPR gene with obesity measures and metabolic syndrome in obese Caucasian adults. Methods: we conducted a cross-sectional study in 212 obese subjects with body mass index (BMI) greater than 30 kg/m2. Measurements of adiposity parameters, blood pressure, fasting blood glucose, insulin concentration, insulin resistance (HOMA-IR), lipid profile, C-reactive protein, and prevalence of metabolic syndrome were determined. Results: the distribution of rs1805134 was 128 TT (60.4 %), 77 TC (36.3 %), and 7 CC (3.3 %). C-allele carriers showed higher levels of BMI, body weight, body fat mass, waist circumference, insulin, HOMA-IR, triglycerides, total energy intake, and carbohydrate intake than non-C-allele carriers. A logistic regression analysis reported a high percentage of elevated waist circumference (OR = 2.22, 95 % CI = 1.201-4.97; p = 0.02), hyperglycemia (OR = 1.54, 95 % CI = 1.01-5.44; p = 0.01), and metabolic syndrome percentage (OR = 1.41, 95 % CI = 1.04-5.39; p = 0.03) in C-allele carriers. Conclusions: subjects with the C-allele of the rs1805134 variant of the LEPR gene showed a worse metabolic pattern with a higher percentage of metabolic syndrome, central obesity and hyperglycaemia, probably related to higher energy intake.

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Aller, R., Martín, D. P., Izaola, O., Martínez, J. A., & Román, D. de L. (2023). Association of the leptin receptor rs1805134 polymorphism with obesity parameters, dietary intakes, and metabolic syndrome in Caucasian obese subjects. Nutricion Hospitalaria, 40(1), 35–40. https://doi.org/10.20960/nh.04139

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