It's not what you eat but what your mother eats that could set your bodyweight, suggest scientists at Baylor College of Medicine. Robert Waterland and colleagues studying mice with a genetic tendency to overeat found that successive generations of the mice became fatter. This increasing obesity was prevented by a diet rich in folate and B vitamins.
Read the study at Methyl donor supplementation prevents transgenerational amplification of obesity. For an excellent explanation of this work see Ed Yong’s Obesity amplifies across generations; can folate-rich diets stop it?
My thought is - could the introduction of folic acid fortification of flour in the USA have an unforeseen effect on weight as women consume more folic acid? The fortification programme boosted folate in blood by roughly 140% to begin with, although the levels decreased by about 10% after that. (Pfeiffer et al.) Is that enough of a change?
A quick search of nutritionandfoodsciences.org on the subject of methylation and obesity yielded work by Terruzzi et al. in Journal of Endocrinological Investigation (Vol. 30, No. 9 pp. 747-753) that could back up the possible involvement of DNA methylation in obesity. They found that genetic variants of the methyl group metabolism enzymes are risk factors for obesity. Changes in these enzymes would affect DNA methylation.
It was a good experience to read the articles and contents on this site. http://www.gujaratonnet.com
Posted by: Shanky Jindal | July 19, 2008 at 05:57 PM