Ribosomal DNA copy number is associated with body mass in humans and other mammals.
Pui Pik LawLiudmila A MikheevaFrancisco Rodriguez-AlgarraFredrika AseniusMaria GregoriRobert A E SeaborneSelin YildizogluJames R C MillerHemanth TummalaRobin MesnageMichael N AntoniouWeilong LiQihua TanSara L HillmanVardhman K RakyanDavid J WilliamsMichelle L HollandPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
Body mass results from a complex interplay between genetics and environment. Previous studies of the genetic contribution to body mass have excluded repetitive regions due to the technical limitations of platforms used for population scale studies. Here we apply genome-wide approaches, identifying an association between adult body mass and the copy number (CN) of 47S-ribosomal DNA (rDNA). rDNA codes for the 18 S, 5.8 S and 28 S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) components of the ribosome. In mammals, there are hundreds of copies of these genes. Inter-individual variation in the rDNA CN has not previously been associated with a mammalian phenotype. Here, we show that rDNA CN variation associates with post-pubertal growth rate in rats and body mass index in adult humans. rDNA CN is not associated with rRNA transcription rates in adult tissues, suggesting the mechanistic link occurs earlier in development. This aligns with the observation that the association emerges by early adulthood.