Effect of Genotype on the Response to Diet in Cardiovascular Disease—A Scoping Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
4. Discussion
4.1. Effects of Genotypes
4.2. Effects of Interventions
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Study (Reference) | Population Characteristics | Country | Intervention (Dietary, Treatment) | Genotype(s) | Outcome | Main Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nuotio et al., 2024. [18] | 118 participants (METSIM study) Age: 65.9 ± 5.6 y BMI: 24.7 ± 2.6 kg/m2 Sex: 100% men | Caucasian | 8 weeks of dietary intervention enriched with: Option 1. Camelina sativa oil (ALA diet) or Option 2. Sunflower oil (LA diet) Both: 30–50 mL/day | FADS1 rs174550 | Lp(a), LDL-C, HDL-C and apo-B, levels | The ALA diet lowered serum Lp(a) levels by 7.3% (p = 0.003) and LA diet by 9.5% (p = 0.089). Both diets led to greater decreases in individuals with higher baseline Lp(a) concentration. LDL-C, non-HDL-C and apo-B were lowered by the ALA diet (p < 0.01). Lipid or lipoprotein responses were not modified by FADS1 rs174550 genotype (p > 0.05). |
Rajendiran et al., 2021. [19] | 92 participants Age: 18 to 65 y Sex: 53% women, 47% men | Canada | 4 weeks of intervention with 5 isoenergetic diets, each, with ≥24 day washout periods. Four diets provided 32% energy from fat, with (i) SFAs from cheese, (ii) SFAs from butter, (iii) n-9 MUFAs, and (iv) n-6 PUFAs, (v) lower in fat (25% energy from fat) and higher in carbohydrates. | ABCA1 rs2230808, rs2066714 ABCG5 rs6720173 ABCA5 rs11887534 APOB rs676210 APOE rs7412, rs429358 CYP7A1 rs3808607 DHCR7 rs760241, rs1044482 LDLR rs688 LIPC rs6083 LIPG rs2000813 LPL rs3200218 MTTP rs2306986 NPC1L1 rs2073547 PCSK9 rs562556 PPARA rs6008259 SCAP rs12487736 SREBF2, rs2228314, rs2228313 LIPA rs1051338 | LDL-C and TG levels | LDL-C was reduced significantly deppending on the source of SFAs (cheese: 3.18 ± 0.04, butter: 3.31 ± 0.04, MUFAs: 3.00 ± 0.04, PUFAs: 2.81 ± 0.04, carbohydrates: 3.11 ± 0.04 mmol/L, all with p < 0.001) while TG levels were not significant (p = 0.117). On 22 candidate SNPs, only ABCA1-rs2066714 and APOE isoforms exhibited consistent effects related with LDL-C levels. Therefore, the combinations of SNPs associated with a significant part of the variability in LDL-C and TG concentrations following dietary interventions differing in their fatty acid profiles. |
Lankinen et al., 2021. [20] | 130 participants (METSIM study) Age: 65.7 ± 5.6 y BMI 24.7 ± 2.6 kg/m2 Sex: 100% men | Finland | 8 weeks of dietary intervention with LA or ALA-enriched diet (30–50 mL/day). Source of LA: sunflower oil. Source of ALA: Camelina sativa oil. | FADS1 rs174550 | Markers of low-grade inflammation and glucose–insulin homeostasis | The sun flower oil dietary group, there is a significant genotype x diet interaction for the proportion of arachidonic acid in plasma phospholipids (p < 0.001) and serum hs-CRP (p = 0.029). In the Camelina sativa oil dietary group, there are significant genotype × diet interactions for n-3 PUFAs, but not for clinical characteristics. |
Hannon et al., 2020. [21] | 115 participants (PATH study) Age: 35.7 ± 0.6 y BMI: 33.1 ± 0.6 kg/m2 Sex: 63% women, 37% men | White, Asian, African American | 12 weeks Intervention: Isocaloric meal + Hass avocado (175 g for males, 140 g for females). Control: meal higher in saturated fat and low in fiber. | 17 SNPs in10 genes related to lipoprotein metabolism: CETP, ABCA1, ANGPTL3/4, CD36, LPL, APOE, APOA5, GCKR, LIPC, MLXIPL. | Total cholesterol, HDL-C, TG, body composition | The avocado consumption may help manage dyslipidemia in adults with overweight and obesity. Three SNP–diet interactions were associated with final TC concentrations: ANGPTL3-rs10889337 (p = 0.01), ANGPTL4-rs2278236 (p = 0.02), and CD36-rs10499859 (p = 0.01). SNPs in GCKR and LPL were associated with TC changes (p = 0.01). The interaction between GCKR-rs1260326 and diet was such that C-homozygotes receiving avocado had final TC concentrations that were significantly lower than the C-homozygotes in the control group (p = 0.02). |
Lankinen et al., 2019. [22] | 59 participants (METSIM study) Age: 55 ± 5.6 y BMI: 26.5 ± 3.5 kg/m2 Sex: 100% men | Finland | 4 weeks of dietary intervention of habitual diet with a supplement of 30, 40, or 50 mL of sunflower oil (62% of LA) daily. | FADS1 rs174550 | Plasma lipids, glucose, and CRP | Responses in concentrations of serum hs-CRP, glucose and the proportion of LA in plasma phospholipids and cholesteryl esters differed between genotype groups (interaction of diet × genotype (p < 0.05). |
AbuMweis et al., 2018. [23] | 130 participants (COMIT study) Age: 46.5 y BMI: ≤29.8 kg/m2 Sex: 54% women 46% men | Canadian | 4 weeks of intervention each. Phase 1. High-oleic canola oil (HOCO). Phase 2. High-oleic canola oil supplemented with DHA (HOCO-DHA). | FADS1, rs174561 FADS2, rs174583 ELOVL2, rs953413 ELOVL5, rs2397142 CETP, rs5882 SCD1, rs2234970 PPARα, rs6008259 LIPF, rs814628 | Lipid levels | The consumption of HOCO-DHA oil reduced TG levels by 24% compared to HOCO (p < 0.05). There were not significant treatment-gene interactions in lipids levels to DHA supplementation (p > 0.05). There were not association between lipid levels and any genetic variations (p > 0.05). |
Takeuchi et al., 2018. [24] | 53 participants Age: 40.0 ± 11.8 y BMI: 21.8 ± 3.0 kg/m2 Sex: 80% women, 20% men | Japan | 4 weeks of intervention with consuming one cookie/day that contained: Option 1: High oleic sunflower oil (control group): Option 2. Partially hydrogenated rapeseed oil (TFA group). | FTO rs9939609 Beta-3 adrenergic receptor rs4994 | Lipid levels | No significant differences in serum cholesterol (total, LDL-C and HDL-C) or TG between the control and trans fatty acid groups were found (p > 0.05). The responses of serum lipid levels, glucose, insulin and hemoglobin A1c were also independent of the gene variants. |
Binia et al., 2017. [25] | 191 participants Age: 26.6 ± 6.3 y BMI: 23.7 ± 2.6 kg/m2 Sex: 64% women, 36% men | México | 6 weeks of dietary intervention with 3 capsules of fish oil (each 647 mg EPA and 253 mg DHA). | PPARα L162V PPARγ P12A | Lipid levels and inflammation biomarkers | Carriers of the minor alleles of PPARα L162V and PPARγ2 P12A had larger responses in reduction in TG (p = 0.02 and p = 0.025, respectively). It was not observe any significant change after intervention in total cholesterol, LDL-C and HDL-C (p > 0.05). |
Fallaize et al., 2017. [26] | 442 participants (LIPGENE study) Age: 55 ± 1 y BMI: 31.6 ± 1.0 kg/m2 Sex: 56% women, 44%men | EU, Ireland, UK, Norway, France, Spain, Poland, Sweden | 12 weeks of dietary intervention with isoenergetic diets that differed according to fatty acids: (1) HF SFA-rich, (2) HF MUFA-rich, (3) LF high-complex carbohydrate supple-mented with LC n-3 PUFAs and (4) Low-fat high-complex carbo-hydrate supplemented with high-oleic acid sunflower oil. | APOE rs7412 rs429358 | Plasma fatty acids, blood pressure, insulin sensitivity and lipid concentrations | Fatty acids-APOE gene interactions at baseline and following change in plasma FA were assessed (p < 0.05). At baseline E4 carriers had higher total cholesterol, LDL-C and apo-B compared with E2 carriers (p ≤ 0.001); and higher total cholesterol, LDL-C and apo-B compared with E3/E3 (p ≤ 0.001). PUFAs dietary were associated with a beneficially lower concentration of apo CIII in E2 carriers, a high proportion of C16:0 was associated with insulin resistance in E4 carriers (p ≤ 0.001). |
Shatwan et al., 2017. [27] | 120 participants (DIVAS study) Age: 47 ± 9 y BMI: 26.3 ± 3.9 kg/m2 Sex: 55% women, 45% men | United Kingdom | 16 weeks of dietary intervention with 3 diets (%Total energy derived from SFAs:MUFAs:n-6 PUFAs). (1) rich in SFAs (17:11:4), (2) rich in MUFAs (9:19:4) and (3) rich in n-6 PUFAs (9:13:10). | APOE rs405509 rs1160985 rs769450 rs439401 rs445925 rs405697 rs1064725 LPL, rs320 rs328 | Fasting lipid levels | After the 16 weeks of intervention, a significant diet x gene interaction was observed for changes in fasting total cholesterol (p = 0.001). For the APOE rs1064725, only TT homozygotes showed a significant reduction in total cholesterol after the MUFA diet compared to other dietary intervention (p = 0.004). |
Minihane et al., 2016. [28] | 312 participants Age: 45 ± 13 y BMI: 25.2 ± 3.4 kg/m2 Sex: 52.2% women, 47.8% men | United Kingdom | 8 weeks of dietary intervention with oil or fish oil providing 0.7 or 1.8 g EPA + DHA/day. | eNOS rs1799983 | Blood pressure | No effects of n-3 fatty acid treatment or any treatment x eNOS genotype interactions were evident in the group as a whole for any of the clinical or biochemical outcomes (p > 0.05). However, adults with isolated systolic hyper-tension, daily doses of EPA + DHA as low as 0.7 g can bring about clinically meaningful reductions in BP (p = 0.046). |
Tremblay et al., 2015. [29] | 208 participants Age: 30.8 ± 8.7 y BMI: 27.8 ± 3.7 kg/m2 Sex: 54% women, 46% men | Canada | 6 weeks of dietary intervention with 3 g/day of n-3 PUFAs (5 capsules/day of oil fish containing 1.9 g EPA and 1.1 g DHA). | 61 SNPs in PLA2G2A PLA2G2 PLA2G2D PLA2G2F PLA2G4A PLA2G6 PLA2G7 | TG levels | The n-3 PUFAs supplementation had an independent effect on plasma TG levels (p < 0.0001). Genotype effects on plasma TG levels were observed for rs2301475 in PLA2G2C, rs818571 in PLA2G2F, and rs1569480 in PLA2G4A. Genotype x supplementation interaction effects on plasma TG levels were observed for rs1805018 in PLA2G7 (p = 0.0286) as well as for rs10752979 (p = 0.0273), rs10737277 (p = 0.0241), rs7540602 (p = 0.0344), and rs3820185 (p = 0.0231) in PLA2G4A. |
Tremblay et al., 2015. [30] | 191 participants (QUSAbec study) Age: 18–50 y BMI: 27.63 ± 3.55 kg/m2 Sex: 50% women, 50% men | Canada | 6 weeks of dietary intervention with 3 g/day of n-3 PUFAs (5 capsules/day of oil fish containing 1.9 g EPA and 1.1 g DHA). | 22 SNPs in PLA2G4A 5 SNPs in PLA2G6 | Total n-6 fatty acids and CRP levels | Supplementation decreased total n-6 FAs without affecting plasma CRP levels. Changes in CRP levels correlated positively with changes in total n-6 FAs in men (r = 0.25 p = 0.01), but not in women. |
Bouchard-Mercier et al., 2014. [31] | 201 participants Age: 30.9 ± 8.7 y BMI: 27.6 ± 3.5 kg/m2 Sex: 46% women, 54% men | Canada | 6 weeks of intervention with fish oil supplementation (5 g/day: 1.9–2.2 g EPA and 1.1 g DHA). | SREBF1 rs12953299 rs4925118 rs4925115 | Insulin sensitivity | The three SNPs (rs12953299, rs4925118 and rs4925115) were associated with differences in the response of plasma insulin levels (p = 0.01, p = 0.005 and p = 0.004, respectively) and rs12953299 as well as rs4925115 were associated with the insulin sensitivity response (p = 0.009 and p = 0.01, respectively) to the fish oil supplementation. |
Wu et al., 2014. [32] | 84 participants Age: 47.6 ± 1.3 y BMI: 26.1 ± 0.5 kg/m2 Sex: not reported | United Kingdom | 8 weeks of fish oil supplementation with 3 capsules fish oil/day (providing a total daily dose of 0.9 g EPA + 0.6 g DHA) or placebo caps. | eNOS Asp298 | Lipid levels and inflammatory markers | There was not a significant effect of fish oil n-3 PUFAs, p = 0.069. GT/TT subjects tended to have higher concentrations of total cholesterol and LDL-C, but vascular function was not affected by either treatment or eNOS genotype. |
Study (Reference) | Population Characteristics | Country | Intervention (Dietary, Treatment) | Genotype(s) | Outcome | Main Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lewis et al., 2023. [33] | 63 participants Age: 56 ± 10 y BMI: 27.6 ± 5.4 kg/m2 Sex: 54% women, 46% men | Greenland | 4 weeks of dietary interventions. Diet 1. Traditional (marine-based, low-carbohydrate). Diet 2. Western (high in imported meats and carbohydrates). | TBC1D4 p.Arg684Ter | Glucose tolerance and cardiometabolic markers. | The traditional diet reduced the mean daily blood glucose respect to Western diet (p = 0.006). Furthermore, it gave rise to a weight loss of 0.5 kg (p = 0.016) relative to the Western diet and 4% lower LDL:HDL ratio, which appeared to be driven by HDL-C elevation (p = 0.06). A diet–gene interaction was indicated on insulin sensitivity (p = 0.093), which reflected a non-significant increase of 1.4 mmol/L in carrier. |
Corella et al., 2018. [34] | 7170 participants Age: 67.06 ± 6.2 y BMI: 29.83 ± 3.8 kg/m2 Sex: 57% women, 43% men | Mediterranean | 7 years of dietary intervention, secondary analysis of PREDIMED diet. Two groups with a Mediterranean diet vegetables intake and control diet | OGG1 rs1052133 (Ser326Cys) | CVD mortality | A significant protective interactions for CVD mortality was found for vegetable intake (HR ratio interaction; p = 0.046). Cys326Cys carriers presented higher total mortality rates than Ser326-carriers (p = 0.009). |
García-Rios et al., 2018. [35] | 424 participants Age: 59.46 ± 0.3 y BMI: 30.93 ± 0.13 kg/m2 Sex: 13% women, 87% men | Spain | 12 months intervention with Mediterranean diet (35% fat, 22% MUFA) vs. Low-fat diet (28% fat, 12% MUFA). | CETP rs3764261 | Plasma lipid concentration | A significant gene–diet interaction between rs3764261 and the dietary pattern for HDL-C (p = 0.006) and TG (p = 0.040) was found. T carriers had higher plasma HDL-C (p = 0.021) and lower TG (p = 0.020) compared with GG. |
Roncero-Ramos et al., 2018. [36] | 1002 participants (CORDIOPREV study) Age: 20 to 75 y BMI: 31.1 ± 0.3 kg/m2 Sex: 17% women, 83% men | Spain | 7 years of dietary intervention with two diets: Diet 1: Low-fat diet (<30% total fat and a minimum of 55% carbohydrates). Diet 2: Mediterranean diet (35% calories as fat, 15% proteins and 50% carbohydrates). | NLRP3 rs4612666 rs10754558 rs35829419 rs4353135 rs10733113 | Glucose homeostasis and lipid levels | CT + TT-rs4612666 and AG + AA-rs10733113 carriers of NLRP3 increased insulin sensitivity index (ISI) after three years of dietary intervention (p < 0.001). Further analysis by diet showed that the improvement of the ISI in non-diabetic rs10733113 AG + AA carriers was specific to the consumption of the Mediterranean diet (p = 0.041). |
Corella et al., 2016. [37] | 7098 participants Age: 67 ± 6.2 y BMI: 30 ± 3.8 kg/m2 Sex: 57% women, 43% men | Spain | 4.8 years follow-up of MedDiet intervention with MUFAs from: (1) extra virgin olive oil, (2) Mixed nuts, (3) low-fat diet (Control). | CLOCK rs4580704 | CVD risk factors and biochemical profile | A significant interaction (p = 0.018) between CLOCK-rs4580704 and T2D status on stroke. Thus, only in T2D subjects was CLOCK-rs4580704 associated with stroke risk, G-carriers having decreased risk (HR: 0.61; p = 0.024 vs. CC) in the multivariable-adjusted model. |
Gómez-Delgado et al., 2015. [38] | 897 participants (CORDIOPREV study) Age: 59.48 ± 4.48 y BMI: 31.19 ± 0.22 kg/m2 | Spain | 12 months of dietary intervention with: Diet low-fat (LF) or Mediterranean diet (MedDiet) | CLOCK rs1801260 rs3749474 rs4580704 | Lipid metabolism and inflammation status | A significant gene–diet interactions between rs4580704-C/C and the LF diet shown a decrease in high sensitivity CRP (p < 0.001) and an increase in HDL/apo-A1 ratio (p = 0.029) than minor G allele carriers. No other gene–diet interactions were observed in this research. |
Kang et al., 2015. [39] | 93 participants Age: 50.33 ± 1.40 y BMI: 25.5 ± 0.35 kg/m2 Sex: 79% women, 21% men | Korea | 12 weeks of dietary intervention replacing of refined rice intake with one third legumes, one third barleys, and one third whole grains, 3 times/day, and increased vegetable intake to at least six units (30 to 70 g/unit)/day for sufficient dietary fiber intake. | APOA5 -1131C | apoA-5 and TG levels | APOA5-1131C variant modulated the effect of carbohydrates source influencing TG and apoA-5 levels. In the whole grain and legume group, C-allele carriers showed a significant decrease in insulin (p = 0.008), an increase in HDL-C (p = 0.020) and apoA-5 (p = 0.005); TT allele carriers showed a marginal decrease in insulin (p = 0.074) (interaction p < 0.001). |
Corella D. et al., 2014. [40] | 7187 participants (PREDIMED study) Age: 67 ± 6.2 y BMI: 30 ± 3.8 kg/m2 Sex: 57% women, 43% men | Europe | 3 years of MedDiet intervention rich in: (1) Extra-virgin olive oil, (2) Nuts and (3) Control group (low-fat diet) | LPL rs13702 | Cardiovascular risk factors | The LPL-rs13702 was associated with TG at 3 years (main effects, p = 2.1 × 10−7). It was detected a significant gene–diet interaction (p = 0.025) between this SNP and the dietary intervention for changes in TG. In the entire population, it was observed no significant association between the LPL-rs13702 and total CVD (p = 0.569). |
Di Daniele et al., 2014. [41] | 40 participants Age: 46.25 ± 5.97 y BMI: 28.1 ± 2.9 kg/m2 Sex: 100% men | Italy | 28 days of dietary intervention. 14 days: Italian Mediterranean Diet (IMD). 14 days: Organic diet (IMOD) | MTHFR C677T | Homocystein, body composition assessment and biochemical analysis. | A significant interaction between MTHFR and the effect of both the IMD and IMOD on homocysteine levels compared to low protein diet (interaction p < 0.001). Both the IMD and IMOD resulted in significant variations in anthropometric and laboratory measurements. |
Gómez-Delgado et al., 2014. [42] | 1002 participants (CARDIOPREV study) Age: 59.9 ± 0.58 y BMI: 32.3 ± 0.29 kg/m2 Sex: women and men (% not reported) | Spain | 12 months of dietary intervention: (1) MedDiet rich in fat from olive oil (2) Low-fat diet | TNF rs1800629 rs1799964 | Lipid and glucose metabolism | After 12 months of MedDiet a decreasing in TG and hsCRP was statistically significant in G/G subjects compared with A-carriers (p = 0.005 and p = 0.034, respectively). No other gene–diet interactions were observed in either diet. |
Ortega-Azorín et al., 2014. [43] | 7166 participants Age: 66.85 ± 6.3 y BMI: 29.9 ± 3.9 kg/m2 Sex: 58% women 42% men | Europe | 4.8 years of intervention with: (1) Mediterranean diet rich in extra virgin olive oil and nuts (30 g/day) (2) Control diet | MLXIPL rs3812316 C771G Gln241His | Myocardial infarction and lipid levels | MLXIPL-rs3812316 (p = 3.8 × 10−6) and the MedDiet intervention (p = 0.030) were significantly associated with decreased TG. Higher adherence to MedDiet increased the protection of lower myocardial infarction incidence in G-carriers versus CC. |
Study (Reference) | Population Characteristics | Country | Intervention (Dietary, Treatment) | Genotype(s) | Outcome | Main Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pokushalov et al., 2024. [44] | 54 participants Age: 59.2 ± 6.2 y BMI: 24.7 ± 2.6 kg/m2 Sex: 58% women, 42% men | Russia | Six months of intervention with 2 caps/day. Placebo or Supplementation of L-methylfolate (1 mg), pyridoxal-5-phosphate (50 mg) and Methylcobalamin (500 mg) per capsule. | MTHFR rs1801133 C677T rs1801131 MTR rs1805087 MTRR rs1801394 | Homocysteine and lipid levels | The treatment group had a reduction in homocysteine levels by 30.0% and LDL-C by 7.5% compared to the placebo group (p < 0.01). In the subgroup analysis, homozygous minor allele carriers showed a significant reduction in homocysteine (48.3%) and LDL-C (18.6%) levels compared to mixed alleles carriers (p < 0.01). |
Achour et al., 2016. [45] | 132 participants Age: 46.0 ± 15.6 y BMI: Not reported Sex: 60% women, 40% men | Tunisia | 6 months of intervention. Group A: 2 months of B9 vitamin (10 mg/day), and 2 months of B12 vitamin (1000 μg) and 2 months of B9 + B12. Group B: 2 months of B12 vitamin, 2 months with folic acid and 2 months with B9 + B12. | MTHFR C677T | Total homocysteine (tHcy) Vit B9 and B12 concentrations | In group A, a decreasing in tHcy was found in CC carriers when patients were supplemented with vit B12 only (p = 0.009). For CT and TT a significant decrease in tHcy at B9 intake (p = 0.038 and p = 0.005) and B9 + B12 intake (p = 0.024; p = 0.017). In group B, CC carriers decreasing tHcy with B9 + B12 intake (p = 0.031). |
Ding et al., 2016. [46] | 2381participants Age: 62 ± 14 y BMI: 26.5 ± 4.6 kg/m2 Sex: 21% women, 79% men | Norway | 4.9 years intervention with a daily capsule containing one of the following: (1) 0.8 mg folic acid + 0.4 mg vitamin B12 + 40 mg vitamin B6. (2) folic acid + vitamin B12, (3) vitamin B6, (4) Placebo | MTHFD1 rs1076991 | Cardiovascular history and risk factors | An association between the polymorphism and acute myocardial infarction among patients allocated to the combined vitamin B6 and folic acid/B12 treatment (interaction p = 0.047 vs. placebo). This interaction seemed to be introduced by a shift from a lower to higher risk of the combined B vitamin treatment according to the number of T allele. |
Study (Reference) | Population Characteristics | Country | Intervention (Dietary, Treatment) | Genotype(s) | Outcome | Main Findings |
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Sun et al., 2019. [47] | 692 participants Age: 51.4 ± 9.0 y BMI: 32.7 ± 3.89 kg/m2 Sex: 61% women, 39% men | Caucasian | 2 years of dietary intervention with four groups % (fat/protein/carbohydrate): Diet 1: 40/25/35 Diet 2: 20/25/55 Diet 3: 20/15/65 Diet 4: 40/15/45 | The BP-polygenic score (BP-PGS) was calculated based on the 66 SNPs from a BP-GWAS 13 SNPs for SBP 12 SNPs for DBP 41 SNPs for both | Blood pressure | Participants in the bottom vs. upper tertile of SBP/DBP-PGS had a greater decrease in SBP (p = 0.001) and DBP (p < 0.001). Gene–diet interaction had changes in SBP from baseline to 24 months (interaction p = 0.009). Participants with high-protein diet had greater decreases in SBP at 6 months (p = 0.018), 12 months (p = 0.007) and 24 months (p = 0.089). |
Griffin et al., 2018. [48] | 389 participants Age: 51.5 ± 9.5 y BMI: 28.45 ± 4.55 kg/m2 Sex: 42% women, 58% men | White Caucasian | 4 weeks of diet intervention with isoenergetic variations. Reference dietary: Fat and glycemic index (HSFA/HGI) Diet 1: High MUFAs/low GI (HM/LGI) Diet 2: Low fat (LF)/high GI (LF/HGI) Diet 3: LF/LGI Diet variartion (diet 1–3) was high-MUFAs | APOE E2/3/44 | Plasma lipids and glucose homeostasis index | There was a significant diet x genotype interaction to a decrease total cholesterol (p = 0.02) and apo-B (p = 0.006) levels among carriers of E4, when SFA was replaced with low GI carbohydrate (p = 0.02), and a relative increase in total cholesterol, when SFA was replaced with MUFAs and high GI carbohydrates (p = 0.03). Carriers of E2 had an increase in TG when SFA was replaced with MUFAs and low glucose index carbohydrates (p = 0.001). |
Smith et al., 2017. [49] | 42 participants Age: 39.9 ± 10.4 y BMI: 26.9 ± 3.2 y Sex: 75% women, 25% men | USA | 4 weeks of dietary intervention with 2 diets of different fat content: Phase (1) High-fat Western diet (39% fat) and Phase (2) Low-fat traditional Hispanic diet (20% fat). | LIPC rs1800588 | HDL-C, TG, LDL-C, total cholesterol, and OGTT 2 h glucose concentrations | No significant gene–diet interactions were observed for HDL-C (p > 0.05). However, LIPC-CC/CT carriers increased the HDL-C levels with Western diet compared with the Hispanic diet: phase 1 (p = 0.0004); phase 2 (p = 0.0003). In contrast, HDL-C in TT individuals did not differ by diet (p > 0.05). Only major allele carriers benefited from the higher-fat diet for HDL-C. |
Study (Reference) | Population Characteristics | Country | Intervention (Dietary, Treatment) | Genotype(s) | Outcome | Main Findings |
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De Luis et al., 2016. [50] | 283 participants Age: 52.6 ± 10.8 y BMI: 35.4 ± 6.1 kg/m2 Sex: 75% women, 25% men | Spain | 9 months of dietary intervention:Diet HP: High protein/low carbohydrate. Diet S: Standard hypocaloric. | UCP3 rs1800849 | Cardiovascular risk factors | With both diets and only in rs1800849-T genotype (diet HP vs. diet S), total cholesterol (p < 0.05) and LDL-C (p < 0.05) decreased. With diet HP and only in rs1800849-T genotype, glucose (p < 0.05), TG (p < 0.05), insulin levels (p < 0.05) and HOMA-R (p < 0.05) decreased. |
Xu et al., 2015. [51] | 743 aparticipants Age: 50.1 ± 8.9 y BMI: 32.7 ± 3.8 kg/m2 Sex: 61% women, 39% men | USA | 2 years of dietary intervention in 4 diets, varing % fat, protein, and carbohydrate: (1) 20%, 15%, and 65% (2) 20%, 25%, and 55% (3) 40%, 15%, and 45% (4) 40%, 25%, and 35% | LIPC rs2070895 | Lipid levels | Dietary fat modified effects of the variant on total cholesterol, LDL-C and HDL-C (in teraction, p = 0.0008, 0.004, and 0.03, respectively). In the low-fat group, the A-allele was associated with a decrease in total cholesterol and LDL-C (p = 0.07 and p = 0.06, respectively) and an increase in HDL-C levels (p = 0.048), whereas an opposite effect in the high-fat diet group was evident (total cholesterol, p = 0.008 and LDL-C, p = 0.07). |
Study (Reference) | Population Characteristics | Country | Intervention (Dietary, Treatment) | Genotype(s) | Outcome | Main Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kopecky et al., 2022. [52] | 54 participants Age: 49 ± 12 y BMI: 27.2 ± 3.4 kg/m2 Sex: 67% women, 33% men | Canada and USA | 12 weeks of interven-tion divided in 3 phases (4 weeks each). Snacks containing cholesterol-lowering bioactive compounds (≥5 g fiber, 1000 mg ω-3 (n-3) fatty acids, 1000 mg phytosterols, and 1800 μmol antioxidant per serving). Control products calorie matched from the grocery marketplace. | CYP7A1 rs3808607 | Total cholesterol, HDL-C, LDL-C, TG, fasting glucose, insulin and CRP levels. | The consumption of the snacks containing a compendium of cholesterol-lowering bioactive compounds reduced the LDL-C (p < 0.0001) and TG levels (p < 0.0001) compared with control foods. SNPs were not significantly related to outcomes (p = 0.230). |
Ye, et al., 2020. [53] | 56 participants Age: 48.3 ± 3.05 y BMI: 23.2 ± 0.81 kg/m2 Sex: 62.5% women, 37.5% men | China | 45 days of intervention with staple food substitute. Option 1: 80 g/day oatmeal. Option 2: 80 g/day refined white rice. | CYP7A1 rs3808607 APOE rs429358 rs7412 | Lipid levels | The only genotype–diet interactions were observed between oat meal consumption and the variant CYP7A1-rs3808607 with low LDL-C levels (p = 0.04); rs3808607-TT exhibited significantly higher responsiveness to oatmeal (reduction in LDL-C) than G-carriers (p = 0.02). |
Abdullah et al., 2018. [54] | 101 participants Age: 18–69 y BMI: Not reported Sex: 71% women, 29% men | Canada | 4 weeks of dietary intervention of dairy products (3 serving/day): 375 mL/day of 1% milk fat (MF), 175 g/day of 1.5% MF creamy stirred fruit-flavored yogurt, and 30 g/day of 34% MF cheddar cheese. | ABCG5 rs6720173 CYP7A1, rs3808607 DHCR7 rs760241 | Lipid and cholesterol levels | There is a combined effect of the variants ABCG5 rs6720173-C, CYP7A1 rs3808607-TT, and DHCR7 rs760241-GG on LDL-C levels following a blended dairy intake (3 servings/day for 4 weeks) intervention (p = 0.0016). |
Ebrahimi-Mameghani et al., 2018. [55] | 80 participants Age: 38.9 ± 6.9 y BMI: 34.3 ± 4.15 kg/m2 Sex: 72% women, 28% men | Iran | 12 weeks of intervention with Artichoke leaf extract (ALE) supplementation: Group 1. 1800 mg/day of ALE as four tablets. Grupo 2. 1800 mg/day of placebo as four tablets. | TCF7L2 rs7903146 | Anthropometric indices, blood pressure, glucose and lipid profile levels | ALE supplementation decreased insulin level and the HOMA-IR in patients with the of TCF7L2-rs7903146-TT polymorphism (p < 0.05). There was no significant interaction between blood pressure, glucose, and lipid profile response to ALE supplementation (p > 0.05). |
Gu et al., 2018. [56] | 600 participants Age: 39.5 ± 8.5 y BMI: 23.4 ± 3.24 kg/m2 Sex: 56% women, 44% men | China | 14 days of dietary intervention: 7 days with low-NaCl diet (3 g NaCl) followed by a 7 days of high-NaCl diet (18 g NaCl) | SCNN1A rs11614164 rs4764586 rs3741914 SCNN1B and SCNN1G | Blood pressure | The common variants in SCNN1A, rs11614164, rs4764586, and rs3741914 were associated with salt-sensitivity (p = 4.4 × 10−4, p = 1.1 × 10−8, and p = 1.3 × 10−3). Each copy of the minor allele of rs4764586 was associated with an increased odds of salt-sensitivity, whereas each copy of the minor allele of rs11614164 and rs3741914 was associated with a decreased odds of salt-sensitivity, respectively. |
Wang et al., 2017. [57] | 30 participants Age: 59 ± 4 y BMI: 28.5 ± 4.8 kg/m2 Sex: 60% women, 40% men | Canada | 5 weeks of dietary intervention with breakfast rich in barley β-glucan: (1) 3 g of high-molecular weight (HMW), (2) 5 g low-molecular weight (LMW), (3) 3 g LMW or (4) control diet. | CYP7A1 rs3808607 | Cholesterol metabolism and bile acid synthesis | A significant diet x gene interaction was observed for changes in fasting total cholesterol (p = 0.001). For the APOE rs1064725, only TT homozygotes showed a significant reduction in total cholesterol after the MUFAs diet compared to the SFAs or n-6 PUFAs diets (p = 0.004). |
Chu et al., 2016. [58] | 334 participants Age: 38.4 ± 9.9 y BMI: 22.2 ± 3.1 kg/m2 Sex: 47% women, 53% men | China | 21 days of intervention: 7 days low NaCl (3 g/day) 7 days high NaCl (18 g/day) 7 days high NaCl + KCl (4.5 g/day) | ADIPOQ: rs16861194 rs182052 rs16861205 rs822394 rs12495941 rs2241767 rs2082940 | Blood pressure | The rs16861205-ADIPOQ was associated with a decreased in DBP to low-NaCl, and an increase in DBP and MAP to high-NaCl (p = 0.028, p = 0.023 and p = 0.027, respectively). The rs822394 was associated with a decreased in DBP and MAP in responses to low-NaCl and an increase in DBP to high-NaCl (p = 0.023, 0.030 and 0.033, respectively). An association existed between rs16861194 and SBP in response to KCl intervention (p = 0.026). |
Gepner et al., 2016. [59] | 54 participants Age: 57.1 ± 6.5 y BMI: 29.3 ± 4 kg/m2 Sex: 15% women, 85% men | Israel | 6 months of dietary intervention with Mediterranean diet and one option: 150 mL/dinner dry red wine or mineral water. | ADH Arg48His rs1229984 | Blood pressure | A transient decrease in BP was observed in the red wine group at midnight (3–4 h after intake, (p = 0.031) and the following morning at 7–9 am (p = 0.014). Red wine consumers and homozygous for the gene encoding Arg48His; rs1229984, TT, (fast ethanol metabolizers), exhibited a reduction in 24 h SBP, p = 0.002) compared to heterozygotes. |
Guo et al., 2016. [60] | 1906 participants Age: 38.7 ± 9.6 y BMI: 23.3 ± 3.2 kg/m2 Sex: 47% women, 53% men | China | 14 days of dietary intervention: 7 days of low sodium (3 g NaCl). Followed by 7 days of high sodium (18 g NaCl). | NCBT 76 SNPs | Blood pressure | SLC4A4-rs4254735 was associated with a decreased DBP to low NaCl (p = 5.05 × 10−4). In addition, carriers of rs10022637-C SLC4A4 with high NaCl intervention increased their SBP (p = 1.14 × 10−4), DBP (p = 2.26 × 10−5) and BP (p = 2.07 × 10−6). |
Wang et al., 2016. [61] | 30 participants Age: 59 ± 4.5 y BMI: 28.5 ± 2.4 kg/m2 Sex: 60% women, 40% men | Canada | 20 weeks of dietary intervention divided in 4 phases, each was 5 weeks and separated by ≥4 weeks washout period. β-glucan varied in molecular weight and dose: 3 g HMW/day 3 g LMW/day 5 g LMW/day and Wheat and rice (WR) control. | CYP7A1 rs3808607 APOE rs429358 rs7412 | Cholesterol levels | Consumption of 3 g HMW β-glucan/day lowered total cholesterol compared with the control diet (p = 0.0046). This effect was associated with gene–diet interaction, whereby carriers of rs3808607-G allele on CYP7A1 had greater responses to 3 g HMW β-glucan/day in lowering total cholesterol than TT carriers (p = 0.0006). However, LMW β-glucan, at either 3 g/day or 5 g/day did not change cholesterol levels. |
MacKay et al., 2015. [62] | 71 participants Age: 55.04 ± 8.42 y BMI: 28.12 ± 5.45 kg/m2 Sex: 60% women, 40% men | Canada | 12 weeks of dietary intervention divided in two 28 days periods and 4 weeks of washout, which the participants consumed their habitual diets. PS period: 2 g PS/day in margarine. | CYP7A1 rs3808607 APOE e3, e4 CETP rs5882 ABCG8 rs4148217 | Lipid levels | CYP7A1-rs3808607 -T/T showed no LDL-C decrease, while the G-allele was associated with LDL-C response in a dose-dependent fashion (p = 0.0006). Similarly, APOE e3 carriers (p = 0.0370) responded less than APOE e4 carriers (p = 0.0001). Moreover, genoset CYP7A1-rs3808607 T/T/APOE e3 was associated with nonresponsiveness (p = 0.9999). rs5882 in CETP and rs4148217 in ABCG8 did not associate with LDL-C lowering. |
Mackay et al., 2015. [63] | 71 participants Age: 55.04 ± 8.42 y BMI: 28.12 ± 5.45 kg/m2 Sex: 60% women, 40% men | Canada | 12 weeks of dietary intervention divided in two 28 days periods and 4 weeks of washout, which the participants consumed their habitual diets. PS period: 2 g PS/day in margarine. | CYP7A1 rs3808607 CETP rs5882 ABCG8 rs4148217 APOE rs7412 rs429358 | Lipid levels | CYP7A1-rs3808607 T/T showed no LDL-C decrease, while G-allele was associated with LDL-C response in a dose-dependent fashion (G/T, p = 0.0006; G/G, p = 0.0009). APOE ɛ3 carriers (p = 0.0370) responded less than APOE ɛ4 carriers (p < 0.0001). Genotypes are associated with the extent of reduction in circulating LDL-C in response to PS consumption. |
Gammon et al 2014. [64] | 85 participants Age: 48.5 ± 9.5 y BMI: 27.3 ± 3.95 kg/m2 Sex: 100% men | New Zealand | 8 weeks of dietary intervention: 4 weeks of healthy diet run-in period before being randomized to one of two 4 weeks intervention sequences of (1) two green kiwi fruit/day plus healthy diet (kiwifruit) (2) Control group: healthy diet | CETP rs708272 APOA1 rs670 LIPC rs1800588 LIPG rs6507931 | Lipid levels | A significant CETP Taq1B genotype for intervention was observed for the TAG:HDL-C ratio (p = 0.03). B1/B1 homozygotes had a significantly lower TAG:HDL-C (p = 0.03) ratio after the kiwi fruit intervention than after the control intervention, whereas the ratio of B2 carriers was not affected. The lipid response was not affected by other gene polymorphisms. |
Loria-Kohen et al., 2014. [65] | 161 participants Age: 25–65 y BMI: 28.41 ± 0.67 kg/m2 Sex: 16% women 84% men | Spain | 1 year of dietary intervention with usual diets, adding: (1) 500 mL/day of skimmed (S) milk; (2) Semi-skimmed (SS) milk | PPARα rs135549 | Cardiovascular risk factors: Total cholesterol HDL-C, LDL-C | PPARα rs135549-TT was associated with a reduction in the TC/HDL and LDL/HDL ratios after 12 months of S milk intake (p = 0.0015 and p = 0.0005, respectively). No differences were observed after consuming either S or SS milk in the C-carriers. |
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González-Quijano, G.K.; León-Reyes, G.; Rosado, E.L.; Martínez, J.A.; de Luis, D.A.; Ramos-Lopez, O.; Tejero, M.E. Effect of Genotype on the Response to Diet in Cardiovascular Disease—A Scoping Review. Healthcare 2024, 12, 2292. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12222292
González-Quijano GK, León-Reyes G, Rosado EL, Martínez JA, de Luis DA, Ramos-Lopez O, Tejero ME. Effect of Genotype on the Response to Diet in Cardiovascular Disease—A Scoping Review. Healthcare. 2024; 12(22):2292. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12222292
Chicago/Turabian StyleGonzález-Quijano, Génesis K., Guadalupe León-Reyes, Eliane Lopes Rosado, J. Alfredo Martínez, Daniel A. de Luis, Omar Ramos-Lopez, and María Elizabeth Tejero. 2024. "Effect of Genotype on the Response to Diet in Cardiovascular Disease—A Scoping Review" Healthcare 12, no. 22: 2292. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12222292
APA StyleGonzález-Quijano, G. K., León-Reyes, G., Rosado, E. L., Martínez, J. A., de Luis, D. A., Ramos-Lopez, O., & Tejero, M. E. (2024). Effect of Genotype on the Response to Diet in Cardiovascular Disease—A Scoping Review. Healthcare, 12(22), 2292. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12222292