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Birth weight variation is influenced by fetal and maternal genetic and non-genetic factors, and has been reproducibly associated with future cardio-metabolic health outcomes. In expanded genome-wide association analyses of own birth weight (n = 321,223) and offspring birth weight (n = 230,069 mothers), we identified 190 independent association signals (129 of which are novel). We used structural equation modeling to decompose the contributions of direct fetal and indirect maternal genetic effects, then applied Mendelian randomization to illuminate causal pathways. For example, both indirect maternal and direct fetal genetic effects drive the observational relationship between lower birth weight and higher later blood pressure: maternal blood pressure-raising alleles reduce offspring birth weight, but only direct fetal effects of these alleles, once inherited, increase later offspring blood pressure. Using maternal birth weight-lowering genotypes to proxy for an adverse intrauterine environment provided no evidence that it causally raises offspring blood pressure, indicating that the inverse birth weight-blood pressure association is attributable to genetic effects, and not to intrauterine programming.

Original publication

DOI

10.1038/s41588-019-0403-1

Type

Conference paper

Publication Date

05/2019

Volume

51

Pages

804 - 814

Addresses

University of Queensland Diamantina Institute, Translational Research Institute, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

Keywords

EGG Consortium, Humans, Heart Diseases, Metabolic Diseases, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Birth Weight, Body Height, Risk Factors, Fetal Development, Pregnancy, Maternal-Fetal Exchange, Blood Pressure, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Models, Genetic, Adult, Infant, Newborn, Female, Male, Genome-Wide Association Study, Maternal Inheritance