Genetic Epidemiology, Translational Neurogenomics, Psychiatric Genetics and Statistical Genetics Laboratories investigate the pattern of disease in families, particularly identical and non-identical twins, to assess the relative importance of genes and environment in a variety of important health problems.
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PMID
41674649
TITLE
Biologically informed instrument selection for dietary Mendelian randomization using chemosensory receptor variants.
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND NlmCategory: UNASSIGNED
Mendelian randomization (MR) is increasingly used for causal inference in nutritional epidemiology; however, dietary MR studies often rely on instruments statistically selected from genome-wide association studies of self-reported intake, which are vulnerable to pleiotropy and reverse causation and may violate core MR assumptions. We aimed to develop and evaluate a biologically informed framework for selecting valid genetic instruments for dietary exposures, based on genes encoding taste and olfactory receptors that mediate chemosensory inputs and shape food preferences and dietary behaviour.
METHODS NlmCategory: UNASSIGNED
Mendelian randomization (MR) is increasingly used for causal inference in nutritional epidemiology; however, dietary MR studies often rely on instruments statistically selected from genome-wide association studies of self-reported intake, which are vulnerable to pleiotropy and reverse causation and may violate core MR assumptions. We aimed to develop and evaluate a biologically informed framework for selecting valid genetic instruments for dietary exposures, based on genes encoding taste and olfactory receptors that mediate chemosensory inputs and shape food preferences and dietary behaviour. We prioritised 1,214 nonsynonymous variants in 30 taste and 295 olfactory receptor genes with minor allele frequency ≥1%. Associations with 140 food-liking traits were tested in UK Biobank participants aged 37 to 73 years. Candidate variants were evaluated using a multi-stage filtering pipeline designed to improve instrument validity. This included replication in an independent younger cohort (Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children, age 25), concordance between food liking and intake, exclusion of associations with socioeconomic status, assessment of food specificity accounting for linkage disequilibrium and co-consumption patterns, and directionality testing to reduce reverse causation. Retained variants were applied as instruments in MR analyses to assess cardiometabolic outcomes.
RESULTS NlmCategory: UNASSIGNED
Mendelian randomization (MR) is increasingly used for causal inference in nutritional epidemiology; however, dietary MR studies often rely on instruments statistically selected from genome-wide association studies of self-reported intake, which are vulnerable to pleiotropy and reverse causation and may violate core MR assumptions. We aimed to develop and evaluate a biologically informed framework for selecting valid genetic instruments for dietary exposures, based on genes encoding taste and olfactory receptors that mediate chemosensory inputs and shape food preferences and dietary behaviour. We prioritised 1,214 nonsynonymous variants in 30 taste and 295 olfactory receptor genes with minor allele frequency ≥1%. Associations with 140 food-liking traits were tested in UK Biobank participants aged 37 to 73 years. Candidate variants were evaluated using a multi-stage filtering pipeline designed to improve instrument validity. This included replication in an independent younger cohort (Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children, age 25), concordance between food liking and intake, exclusion of associations with socioeconomic status, assessment of food specificity accounting for linkage disequilibrium and co-consumption patterns, and directionality testing to reduce reverse causation. Retained variants were applied as instruments in MR analyses to assess cardiometabolic outcomes. We identified 268 nonsynonymous variants within 101 olfactory and 16 taste receptor genes associated with 96 food-liking traits. The filtering process yielded 28 candidate instruments for 24 foods. Among these, the instrument for onion liking uniquely satisfied all criteria for classification as high confidence. To demonstrate clinical relevance, genetically proxied onion liking was associated with lower blood pressure and a reduced risk of type 2 diabetes in MR analyses, with no evidence of effects on body mass index, glycaemic traits, or serum lipid levels.
CONCLUSIONS NlmCategory: UNASSIGNED
Mendelian randomization (MR) is increasingly used for causal inference in nutritional epidemiology; however, dietary MR studies often rely on instruments statistically selected from genome-wide association studies of self-reported intake, which are vulnerable to pleiotropy and reverse causation and may violate core MR assumptions. We aimed to develop and evaluate a biologically informed framework for selecting valid genetic instruments for dietary exposures, based on genes encoding taste and olfactory receptors that mediate chemosensory inputs and shape food preferences and dietary behaviour. We prioritised 1,214 nonsynonymous variants in 30 taste and 295 olfactory receptor genes with minor allele frequency ≥1%. Associations with 140 food-liking traits were tested in UK Biobank participants aged 37 to 73 years. Candidate variants were evaluated using a multi-stage filtering pipeline designed to improve instrument validity. This included replication in an independent younger cohort (Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children, age 25), concordance between food liking and intake, exclusion of associations with socioeconomic status, assessment of food specificity accounting for linkage disequilibrium and co-consumption patterns, and directionality testing to reduce reverse causation. Retained variants were applied as instruments in MR analyses to assess cardiometabolic outcomes. We identified 268 nonsynonymous variants within 101 olfactory and 16 taste receptor genes associated with 96 food-liking traits. The filtering process yielded 28 candidate instruments for 24 foods. Among these, the instrument for onion liking uniquely satisfied all criteria for classification as high confidence. To demonstrate clinical relevance, genetically proxied onion liking was associated with lower blood pressure and a reduced risk of type 2 diabetes in MR analyses, with no evidence of effects on body mass index, glycaemic traits, or serum lipid levels. Guiding genetic instrument selection using chemosensory receptor genes provides a biologically informed strategy for dietary Mendelian randomization that reduces susceptibility to pleiotropy and reverse causation. This framework enables more robust causal evaluation of diet-disease relationships and strengthens inference in nutritional epidemiology and public health research.
DATE PUBLISHED
2026 Feb 06
HISTORY
PUBSTATUS PUBSTATUSDATE
pubmed 2026/02/12 06:54
medline 2026/02/12 06:55
entrez 2026/02/12 05:35
pmc-release 2026/02/10
AUTHORS
NAME COLLECTIVENAME LASTNAME FORENAME INITIALS AFFILIATION AFFILIATIONINFO
Hwang LD Hwang Liang-Dar LD Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Lin C Lin Cailu C Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Evans DM Evans David M DM MRC Integrative Epidemiology Unit, University of Bristol, Bristol BS8 2BN, UK.
Martin NG Martin Nicholas G NG QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute, Brisbane, QLD, Australia.
Reed DR Reed Danielle R DR Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Joseph PV Joseph Paule V PV Section of Sensory Science and Metabolism (SenSMet), National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism & National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA.
INVESTIGATORS
JOURNAL
VOLUME:
ISSUE:
TITLE: medRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences
ISOABBREVIATION: medRxiv
YEAR: 2026
MONTH: Feb
DAY: 06
MEDLINEDATE:
SEASON:
CITEDMEDIUM: Internet
ISSN:
ISSNTYPE:
MEDLINE JOURNAL
MEDLINETA: medRxiv
COUNTRY: United States
ISSNLINKING:
NLMUNIQUEID: 101767986
PUBLICATION TYPE
PUBLICATIONTYPE TEXT
Journal Article
Preprint
COMMENTS AND CORRECTIONS
GRANTS
GRANTID AGENCY COUNTRY
Wellcome Trust United Kingdom
GENERAL NOTE
KEYWORDS
KEYWORD
ALSPAC
Mendelian randomization
UK Biobank
blood pressure
dietary exposure
food liking
olfactory receptor
taste receptor
type 2 diabetes
MESH HEADINGS
SUPPLEMENTARY MESH
GENE SYMBOLS
CHEMICALS
OTHER ID's