Research in the Faculty of Agriculture and Forestry
- Agrotechnology
- Animal Science
- Applied Biology
- Applied Chemistry and Microbiology
- Economics and Management
- Food Technology
- Forest Ecology
- Forest Economics
- Forest Resource Management
- Research projects (TUHTI)
- Publications (JULKI)
- Expertise (ASTI)
- Other Academic Activities (MUTI)
- Activities of Societal Sign. (YHTI)
Office :
P.O. Box 62 (Viikinkaari 11)
FI-00014 University of Helsinki
tel. + 358 - 9 1915 8247
fax: + 358 - 9 1915 8575
mmtdk-international(at)helsinki.fi
Associations of gene polymorphisms and nutrition with calcium homeostasis and bone mineral density - Studies on skeletal nutrigenetics
Heredity explains a major part of the variation in calcium homeostasis and bone strength, and the susceptibility to osteoporosis is polygenetically regulated. Bone phenotype results from the interplay between lifestyle and genes, and several nutritional factors modulate bone health throughout life. Thus, nutrigenetics examining the genetic variation in nutrient intake and homeostatic control is an important research area in the etiology of osteoporosis. Despite continuing progress in the search for candidate genes for osteoporosis, the results thus far have been inconclusive.
The main objective of this thesis was to investigate the associations of lactase, vitamin D receptor (VDR), calcium sensing receptor (CaSR) and parathyroid hormone (PTH) gene polymorphisms and lifestyle factors and their interactions with bone health in Finns at varying stages of the skeletal life span. Markers of calcium homeostasis and bone remodelling were measured from blood and urine samples. Bone strength was measured at peripheral and central bone sites. Lifestyle factors were assessed with questionnaires and interviews.
Genetic lactase non-persistence (the C/C-13910 genotype) was associated with lower consumption of milk from childhood, predisposing females in particular to inadequate calcium intake. Consumption of low-lactose milk and milk products was shown to decrease the risk for inadequate calcium intake. In young adulthood, bone loss was more common in males than in females. Males with the lactase C/C-13910 genotype may be more susceptible to bone loss than males with the other lactase genotypes, although calcium intake predicts changes in bone mass more than the lactase genotype. The BsmI and FokI polymorphisms of the VDR gene were associated with bone mass in growing adolescents, but the associations weakened with age. In young adults, the A986S polymorphism of the calcium sensing receptor gene was associated with serum ionized calcium concentrations, and the BstBI polymorphism of the parathyroid gene was related to bone strength. The FokI polymorphism and sodium intake showed an interaction effect on urinary calcium excretion. A novel gene-gene interaction between the VDR FokI and PTH BstBI gene polymorphisms was found in the regulation of PTH secretion and urinary calcium excretion.
Further research should be carried out with more number of Finns at varying stages of the skeletal life span and more detailed measurements of bone strength. Research should concern mechanisms by which genetic variants affect calcium homeostasis and bone strength, and the role of diet-gene and gene-gene interactions in the pathogenesis of osteoporosis.
Marika Laaksonen’s Doctoral dissertation Associations of gene polymorphisms and nutrition with calcium homeostasis and bone mineral density - Studies on skeletal nutrigenetics takes place in University of Helsinki, Faculty of Agriculture and Forestry, Department of Applied Chemistry and Microbiology on October 18th 2008.