An international research team studied more than 260,000 people to identify new genes that increase the risk of obesity, and also to compare genetic factors that cause extreme obesity with those that are linked to rest of the Body Mass Index (BMI) range.
"We know from experience that genetic factors are important for the emergence of both milder and more extreme forms of obesity, but how much overlap there is between genes that are involved in extreme obesity and normal or slightly elevated BMI has not been examined systematically previously," said Erik Ingelsson, Professor at the Department of Medical Sciences and Science for Life Laboratory, Uppsala University, who coordinated the study.
In the study published in the journal Nature Genetics, researchers identified loci (regions of the genome) that are linked to obesity through examining the relationship between different body measurements and 2.8 million gene variants in 168,267 participants.
They then carried out a targeted follow-up of the 273 gene variants with the strongest link to various body measurements in another 109,703 people.
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Through this extensive gene mapping they were able to confirm the majority of the gene loci which were already linked to various body measurements, as well as identifying four new gene loci linked to height, and seven loci linked to overweight and obesity.
"This knowledge is important because it increases the biological understanding of the origins of extreme obesity as well as milder forms of obesity," said Ingelsson.
"Our results suggest that extremely obese individuals have a greater number of gene variants that increase the risk of obesity, rather than completely different genes being involved.
"In the long term, our findings may lead to new ways of preventing and treating obesity, which is one of the greatest global public health problems of our age," he said.