PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Largest ever genetic study of age of puberty in girls shows links with weight gain

2024-07-01
(Press-News.org) Genes can indirectly influence the age at which girls have their first period by accelerating weight gain in childhood, a known risk factor for early puberty, a Cambridge-led study has found. Other genes can directly affect age of puberty, some with profound effects.

In the largest study of its kind to date, an international team led by researchers at the Medical Research Council (MRC) Epidemiology Unit, University of Cambridge, studied the DNA of around 800,000 women from Europe, North America, China, Japan, and Korea.

Published today in Nature Genetics, the researchers found more than 1,000 variants – small changes in DNA – that influence the age of first menstrual period. Around 600 of these variants were observed for the first time.

The age at which girls hit puberty and start having periods normally occurs between ages 10 to 15, though this has been getting earlier and earlier in recent decades. The reasons for this are not fully understood. Early puberty is linked with increased risk of a number of diseases in later life, including type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and certain cancers. Later puberty on the other hand, has been linked to improved health in adulthood and a longer lifespan.

Just under half (45%) of the discovered genetic variants affected puberty indirectly, by increasing weight gain in early childhood.

Corresponding author Professor John Perry said: “Many of the genes we’ve found influence early puberty by first accelerating weight gain in infants and young children. This can then lead to potentially serious health problems in later life, as having earlier puberty leads to higher rates of overweight and obesity in adulthood.”

Previous work by the team – together with researchers at Cambridge’s MRC Metabolic Diseases Unit – showed that a receptor in the brain, known as MC3R, detects the nutritional state of the body and regulates the timing of puberty and rate of growth in children, providing a mechanism by which this occurs. Other identified genes appeared to be acting in the brain to control the release of reproductive hormones.

The scientists also analysed rare genetic variants that are carried by very few people, but which can have large effects on puberty. For example, they found that one in 3,800 women carry variants in the gene ZNF483, which caused these women to experience puberty on average, 1.3 years later.

Dr Katherine Kentistou, lead study investigator, added: “This is the first time we’ve ever been able to analyse rare genetic variants at this scale. We have identified six genes which all profoundly affect the timing of puberty. While these genes were discovered in girls, they often have the same impact on the timing of puberty in boys. The new mechanisms we describe could form the basis of interventions for individuals at risk of early puberty and obesity.”

The researchers also generated a genetic score that predicted whether a girl was likely to hit puberty very early or very late. Girls with the highest 1% of this genetic score were 11 times more likely to have extremely delayed puberty – that is, after age 15 years. On the other hand, girls with the lowest 1% genetic score were 14 times more likely to have extremely early puberty – before age 10.

Senior author and paediatrician Professor Ken Ong said: “In the future, we may be able to use these genetic scores in the clinic to identify those girls whose puberty will come very early or very late. The NHS is already trialling whole genome sequencing at birth, and this would give us the genetic information we need to make this possible.

“Children who present in the NHS with very early puberty – at age seven or eight – are offered puberty blockers to delay it. But age of puberty is a continuum, and if they miss this threshold, there’s currently nothing we have to offer. We need other interventions, whether that’s oral medication or a behavioural approach, to help. This could be important for their health when they grow up.”

The research was supported by the Medical Research Council and included data from the UK Biobank.

Reference

Kentistou, KA & Kaisinger, LR, et al. Understanding the genetic complexity of puberty timing across the allele frequency spectrum. Nat Gen; 1 July 2024; DOI: 10.1038/s41588-024-01798-4

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Sixty-million-year-old grape seeds reveal how the death of the dinosaurs may have paved the way for grapes to spread

Sixty-million-year-old grape seeds reveal how the death of the dinosaurs may have paved the way for grapes to spread
2024-07-01
If you’ve ever snacked on raisins or enjoyed a glass of wine, you may, in part, have the extinction of the dinosaurs to thank for it. In a discovery described in the journal Nature Plants, researchers found fossil grape seeds that range from 60 to 19 million years old in Colombia, Panama, and Peru.  One of these species represents the earliest known example of plants from the grape family in the Western Hemisphere. These fossil seeds help show how the grape family spread in the years following the death of the dinosaurs. “These are the oldest grapes ever found in this part of the world, and they’re a few million years ...

AI model finds the cancer clues at lightning speed

AI model finds the cancer clues at lightning speed
2024-07-01
Researchers at the University of Gothenburg have developed an AI model that increases the potential for detecting cancer through sugar analyses. The AI model is faster and better at finding abnormalities than the current semi-manual method.   Glycans, or structures of sugar molecules in our cells, can be measured by mass spectrometry. One important use is that the structures can indicate different forms of cancer in the cells. However, the data from the mass spectrometer measurement must be carefully analysed by humans to work out the structure from the glycan fragmentation. This process can take anywhere from hours ...

Individuals can tell if their memories are trustworthy, new study shows

2024-07-01
How much trust should we put in our memories? New research shows we have a good awareness of when we are recalling events accurately – and when our brain is filling in gaps with general knowledge.  Memories are a blend of recalled details and ‘prototypical’ information, but a study at the University of Birmingham has shown that when prototypes appear more prominent, we become less confident in the recollection.  This means that we are able to distinguish between these two types of memory, and accurately assess how ...

Palliative care beneficial to manage symptoms, improve quality of life for people with CVD

2024-07-01
Statement Highlights: Palliative medication management focuses on providing relief from symptoms and enhancing quality of life for people with cardiovascular disease throughout the various stages of the disease. Decisions about initiating, adjusting or discontinuing cardiovascular and other medicines should be patient-centered and include input from multiple specialties including cardiology experts in close collaboration with primary care professionals. Evidence shows that adding palliative care interventions to standard cardiovascular ...

How researchers are using digital city-building games to shape the future

2024-07-01
Lancaster University researchers have come up with exciting and sophisticated new mapping technology enabling future generations to get involved in creating their own future built landscape. They say, in their new research published today, that planners are missing a real trick when it comes to encouraging and involving the public to help shape their own towns, cities and counties for the future. They also say that games platforms can be used to plan future cities and also help the public immerse themselves in these future worlds. The researchers have modified Colossal Order’s game ‘Cities: Skylines’ ...

New professorship for Large Engines Research at Graz University of Technology

New professorship for Large Engines Research at Graz University of Technology
2024-07-01
Large engines are essential for the global transport and energy sector, powering container ships, locomotives, decentralised power plants and heavy construction machinery. In many areas, battery-powered electric engines are not feasible, which is why the further development of large combustion engines is a key factor for meeting climate protection targets: through greater efficiency, but above all by using new, climate-neutral fuels. In order to strengthen research and the training of specialists in this field, Graz University of Technology ...

Choose where to plant energy crops wisely to minimise loss of biodiversity, says new study

2024-07-01
In the fight to protect biodiversity and limit climate change, the world will reap what it sows, say researchers from the University of Surrey.   Energy crops can be used for heat, electricity and even biofuels like bioethanol. They will become more important as the world transitions away from fossil fuels. In a new study, researchers from Surrey have shown that where you choose to plant energy crops makes a big difference to biodiversity.  A detailed analysis has shown that planting energy crops on existing agricultural land in places like China and Central Europe could minimise harm to biodiversity ...

Addiction: Biased choice not a chronic brain disease, research suggests

2024-07-01
Addiction is not simply a chronic brain disease and considering it as such can limit treatment options and increase stigma, an extensive research review suggests. After decades of research, Professor of Developmental Psychopathology Reinout W. Wiers suggests that while in some extreme cases addition can be considered a chronic brain disease, in most cases it should be considered as biased choice. According to in-depth research examined in new book A New Approach to Addiction and Choice, portraying addiction as a chronic brain disease reduces confidence in the possibility of lasting change, in both the addict themselves and the therapist. What does science say? The ...

Intake of ultra-processed foods linked with increased risk of death

2024-06-30
Chicago (June 30, 2024) — In a new study, older adults who reported consuming higher amounts of ultra-processed foods, as defined by the NOVA classification system, were about 10% more likely to die over a median follow-up of 23 years compared with those who consumed less processed food. The findings are based on a large study that has tracked over half a million U.S. adults for nearly three decades. According to the results, higher intake of ultra-processed foods was associated with modest increases in death from any cause and from deaths related specifically to heart ...

Limiting ultra-processed foods does not necessarily make for a healthy diet

Limiting ultra-processed foods does not necessarily make for a healthy diet
2024-06-30
Chicago (June 30, 2024) — A new study demonstrates that eating primarily minimally processed foods, as they are defined by the NOVA classification system, does not automatically make for a healthy diet, suggesting that the types of foods we eat may matter more than the level of processing used to make them. Comparing two menus reflecting a typical Western diet — one emphasizing minimally processed foods and the other emphasizing ultra-processed foods, as categorized by the NOVA classification system — the researchers found that ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Popular prescription weight loss drugs linked to uncommon blinding condition

COVID-19 vaccination and parent-reported symptomatic child asthma prevalence

Experimental drug supercharges medicine that reverses opioid overdose

Risk of nonarteritic anterior ischemic optic neuropathy in patients prescribed semaglutide

Environmental toxicant exposure and depressive symptoms

Web-based cognitive behavioral treatment for bulimia nervosa

States with highest COVID-19 vaccination rates showed steepest decline in pediatric asthma prevalence

Scientists unravel life-saving effect of dexamethasone in COVID-19

Mapping the surfaces of MXenes, atom by atom, reveals new potential for the 2D materials

Mobile phone data helps track pathogen spread and evolution of superbugs

Discovery of cellular mechanism to maintain brain’s energy could benefit late-life brain health

Extinct humans survived on the Tibetan plateau for 160,000 years

PolyU study reveals the mechanism of bio-inspired control of liquid flow, enlightening breakthroughs in fluid dynamics and nature-inspired materials technologies

Early-onset El Niño means warmer winters in East Asia, and vice versa

How to avoid wasting huge amounts of energy

Bowel cancer turns genetic switches on and off to outwit the immune system

Shark hatching success drops from 82% to 11% in climate change scenario

Meet the team 3D modelling France’s natural history collections

Artificial light is a deadly siren song for young fish

Social media is a likely cause of ‘confusion’ in modern mate selection

Exploring bird breeding behaviour and microbiomes in the radioactive Chornobyl Exclusion Zone

Discovering new anti-aging secrets from the world’s longest-living vertebrate

Pregnant fish can also get “baby brain”, but not the way that mammals do

Pasteurization inactivates highly infectious avian flu in milk

KIER develops 'viologen redox flow battery' to replace vanadium’

Chemists synthesize an improved building block for medicines

A genetic algorithm for phononic crystals

Machine learning could aid efforts to answer long-standing astrophysical questions

Research spotlight: Uncovering how a cellular miscommunication leads to cognitive impairment in female patients with Alzheimer’s disease

AI model to improve patient response to cancer therapy

[Press-News.org] Largest ever genetic study of age of puberty in girls shows links with weight gain