ScienceDaily (Apr. 6, 2010) — Performance of  an hour or more of physical activity per day by adolescents is  associated with control of body weight even among those who are  genetically predisposed to obesity, according to a report in the April  issue of Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, one  of the JAMA/Archives journals.
"There is compelling evidence that human obesity is a multifactorial  disorder where both genes and lifestyle factors, including diet and  physical activity, are important contributors," the authors write as  background information in the article. "Among the obesity-related genes,  polymorphisms in the fat mass- and obesity-associated gene (FTO)  are strongly associated with body fat estimates in populations of  different ethnic background or ages." Each copy of a mutation in this  gene may be associated with a weight increase of approximately 1.5  kilograms or 3.3 pounds.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services recently released  updated guidelines recommending that children and adolescents  participate in physical activity for 60 minutes per day or longer, with  most exercise being of moderate to vigorous intensity. To see if this  level of physical activity reduces the effects of mutations in the FTO  gene on body fat, Jonatan R. Ruiz, Ph.D., of the Karolinska Institutet,  Huddinge, Sweden, and colleagues studied 752 adolescents who were part  of a cross-sectional study in 10 European countries between October 2006  and December 2007.
Of the participating teens, 275 (37 percent) had no copies of the  obesity mutation, 354 (47 percent) had one copy and 123 (16 percent) had  two copies. The mutation was associated with a higher body mass index  (BMI), higher body fat percentage and a larger waist circumference.
However, among participants who met the daily physical activity  recommendations, the effect of the gene mutation was much lower. For  each copy of the mutated gene, those who exercised as recommended had a  BMI an average of 0.17 higher than those with no mutations, compared  with 0.65 higher per mutation among those who did not meet exercise  requirements. Similarly, each mutated gene was associated with an  increase of 0.4 percent in body fat and a 0.6-centimeter increase in  waist circumference among those who met activity guidelines, compared  with a 1.7 percent increase in body fat and a 1.15 centimeter increase  in waist circumference among those who did not.
"These findings have important public health implications and  indicate that meeting the physical activity recommendations may offset  the genetic predisposition to obesity associated with the FTO  polymorphism in adolescents," the authors write. "Indeed, adolescents  meeting the daily physical activity recommendations may overcome the  effect of this gene on obesity-related traits."
Source: http://newscri.be/link/1066000
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