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Active OTHER RESEARCH-RELATED NIH (US)

The Contribution of Omic Profiles to Weight Loss and Obesity

$1.59M USD

Funder NATIONAL HEART, LUNG, AND BLOOD INSTITUTE
Recipient Organization University of Colorado Denver
Country United States
Start Date Mar 01, 2022
End Date Feb 28, 2027
Duration 1,825 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10792910
Grant Description

PROJECT SUMMARY The development of cardiovascular disease (CVD) is a complex process, with obesity being a major risk factor. Weight loss among overweight/obese individuals is a key component of the primary prevention of CVD, but there is marked variability across individuals in response to lifestyle weight loss interventions. It is critical to

improve our understanding of drivers of weight loss responsiveness as this may help identify causal factors in obesity and may ultimately lead to new or more personalized prevention or treatment opportunities. This study will examine how genetics, gut microbiota (GM), and metabolites contribute towards measures of

responsiveness during an ongoing 1-year lifestyle weight loss trial of the standard weight loss approach, daily caloric restriction (DCR), versus a novel alternative, intermittent fasting (IMF). This understanding of the causal relationships between omic profiles and weight loss/health improvements in an interventional setting will target

an investigation into GM and metabolites as mediators of the association between genetic obesity risk and obesity-related phenotypes in larger epidemiological cohorts. Preliminary data from a participant subset in the intervention that provides evidence of feasibility and informs the hypotheses for the following innovative aims:

Aim 1: Assess longitudinal changes in GM and metabolites, as well as the predominant drivers of these changes, during a lifestyle weight loss intervention of DCR versus IMF. Aim 2: Evaluate associations of a measure of genetic risk for obesity and GM/metabolites with responsiveness during a lifestyle weight loss

intervention. Aim 3: Investigate whether GM/metabolites mediate the association between a multiethnic obesity polygenic risk score and measures of obesity in two epidemiological cohorts. This Career Development Award will also provide the Candidate with the opportunity to gain important skills and expertise. She has a clear plan to gain training related to: 1) processing shotgun metagenomic GM and

metabolomic data; 2) causal inference and other relevant methods for the analysis of multi-omics data; and 3) multiethnic polygenic risk scores. The training plan involves coursework, conference attendance, and in-person training with leading scholars, in conjunction with guidance from a mentorship team of renowned leaders in

their respective fields of genetic epidemiology (Dr. Leslie Lange; Primary Mentor), bioinformatics and the human gut microbiome (Dr. Catherine Lozupone), biostatistics (Dr. Katerina Kechris), and clinical weight loss interventions (Dr. Victoria Catenacci). This training plan combines the exceptional research environment at the

University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus with generous institutional support and ample resources, as well as an outstanding network of advisors. This work will facilitate the candidate's successful transition to an independent career in molecular epidemiology with the expertise to integrate complex types of omics data in

order to improve our understanding of disease pathophysiology and to inform innovative prevention and intervention efforts for obesity and CVD.

All Grantees

University of Colorado Denver

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