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Low birth weight in MZ twins discordant for birth weight is associated with shorter telomere length and lower IQ, but not Anxiety/Depression in later life

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posted on 2015-04-01, 00:00 authored by Jana Strohmaier, Jenny van Dongen, Gonneke Willemsen, Dale R Nyholt, Gu Zhu, Veryan Codd, Boris Novakovic, Narelle Hansell, Margaret J Wright, Liz Rietschel, Fabian Streit, Anjali K Henders, Grant W Montgomery, Nilesh J Samani, Nathan A Gillespie, Ian B Hickie, Jeffrey CraigJeffrey Craig, Richard Saffery, Dorret I Boomsma, Marcella Rietschel, Nicholas G Martin
Shorter telomere length (TL) has found to be associated with lower birth weight and with lower cognitive ability and psychiatric disorders. However, the direction of causation of these associations and the extent to which they are genetically or environmentally mediated are unclear. Within-pair comparisons of monozygotic (MZ) and dizygotic (DZ) twins can throw light on these questions. We investigated correlations of within pair differences in telomere length, IQ, and anxiety/depression in an initial sample from Brisbane (242 MZ pairs, 245 DZ same sex (DZSS) pairs) and in replication samples from Amsterdam (514 MZ pairs, 233 DZSS pairs) and Melbourne (19 pairs selected for extreme high or low birth weight difference). Intra-pair differences of birth weight and telomere length were significantly correlated in MZ twins, but not in DZSS twins. Greater intra-pair differences of telomere length were observed in the 10% of MZ twins with the greatest difference in birth weight compared to the bottom 90% in both samples and also in the Melbourne sample. Intra-pair differences of telomere length and IQ, but not of TL and anxiety/depression, were correlated in MZ twins, and to a smaller extent in DZSS twins. Our findings suggest that the same prenatal effects that reduce birth weight also influence telomere length in MZ twins. The association between telomere length and IQ is partly driven by the same prenatal effects that decrease birth weight.

History

Journal

Twin research and human genetics

Volume

18

Issue

2

Pagination

198 - 209

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Location

Cambridge, Eng.

ISSN

1832-4274

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2015, The Authors