The Relation Between Adult Weight Gain, Adipocyte Volume And The Metabolic Profile At Middle Age
Verkouter I., Noordam R., Loh NY., Willems van Dijk K., Zock PL., Mook-Kanamori D., le Cessie S., Rosendaal FR., Karpe F., Christodoulides C., de Mutsert R.
Abstract Purpose Weight gain during adulthood increases cardiometabolic disease risk, possibly through adipocyte hypertrophy. We aimed to study the specific metabolomic profile of adult weight gain, and to examine its association with adipocyte volume. Methods Nuclear magnetic resonance-based metabolomics were measured in the Netherlands Epidemiology of Obesity (NEO) study (n=6 347, discovery) and Oxford Biobank (n=6 317, replication). Adult weight gain was calculated as the absolute difference between BMI at middle age and recalled BMI at age 20. We performed linear regression analyses with both exposures BMI at age 20 years and weight gain, and separately with BMI at middle age in relation to 149 serum metabolomic measures, adjusted for age, sex and multiple testing. Additionally, subcutaneous abdominal adipocyte biopsies were collected in a subset of the Oxford Biobank (n=114) to estimate adipocyte volume. Results Mean (SD) weight gain was 4.5 (3.7) kg/m2 in the NEO study and 3.6 (3.7) kg/m2 in the Oxford Biobank. Weight gain, and not BMI at age 20 nor middle age, was associated with concentrations of 7 metabolomic measures after successful replication, which included polyunsaturated fatty acids, small to medium low-density lipoproteins and total intermediate-density lipoprotein. One SD weight gain was associated with 386 μm3 (95% CI 143 – 629) higher median adipocyte volume. Adipocyte volume was associated with lipoprotein particles specific for adult weight gain. Main conclusions Adult weight gain is associated with specific metabolomic alterations of which the higher lipoprotein concentrations were likely contributed by larger adipocyte volumes, presumably linking weight gain to cardiometabolic disease.