Twin studies can provide us insight on environmental factors that can effect height. Even if height is determined solely by genetics, environmental factors can manipulate epigentic factors and genetic regulation. If height is found to be 20% environmental in twin studies where twins engage in normal activities that means that supranormal activities like LSJL may affect height much more. And remember bone is a substance and that means it shares the properties of all substances like being capable of being stretched.
An assessment of the individual and collective effects of variants on height using twins and a developmentally informative study design.
"In a sample of 3,187 twins and 3,294 of their parents, we sought to investigate association of both individual variants and a genotype-based heightscore involving 176 of the 180 common genetic variants with adult height identified recently by the GIANT consortium. First, longitudinal observations on height spanning pre-adolescence through adulthood in the twin sample allowed us to investigate the separate effects of the previously identified SNPs on pre-pubertal height and pubertal growth spurt. We show that the effect of SNPs identified by the GIANT consortium is primarily on prepubertal height[so genes mainly influence height prepuberty? intersting]. Only one SNP, rs7759938 in LIN28B, approached a significant association with pubertal growth. Second, we show how using the twin data to control statistically for environmental variance can provide insight into the ultimate magnitude of SNP effects and consequently the genetic architecture of a phenotype. Specifically, we computed a genetic score by weighting SNPs according to their effects as assessed via meta-analysis. This weighted score accounted for 9.2% of the phenotypic variance in height, but 14.3% of the corresponding genetic variance."
Interestingly, according to table 1 there's a .25 cm increase in height males between age 20 and 29(however there are so many other possibilities for this increase rather than a .25cm growth in adult males between 20 and 29, note for instance how females show an average height reduction between 25 and 29).
and from 0.84 to 0.94 in female MZ pairs"<-Still however a significant part that is not correlated between twins.
This study found that genetic factors account for 90% when self-reporting bias is removed. 10% is still a large place for enivornmental factors however and gives the possibility for even more environmental influence when you have extraordinary stimulation like LSJL.
Bias, precision and heritability of self-reported and clinically measured height in Australian twins.
This study however found a higher percentage of environmental factors affected height. It used self reported height but it measured the accuracy of self-reported height against height measurements.
"Two cohorts of monozygotic and dizygotic (same sex and opposite sex) Finnish twin pairs were studied longitudinally using self-reported height at 11-12, 14, and 17 years and adult age (FinnTwin12) and at 16, 17, and 18 years and adult age (FinnTwin16). Univariate and multivariate variance component models for twin data were used.
From childhood to adulthood, genetic differences explained 72-81% of the variation of height in boys and 65-86% in girls. Environmentalfactors common to co-twins explained 5-23% of the variation of height, with the residual variation explained by environmental factors unique to each twin individual. Common environmental factors affecting height were highly correlated between the analyzed ages (0.72-0.99 and 0.91-1.00 for boys and girls, respectively). Genetic (0.58-0.99 and 0.70-0.99, respectively) and unique environmental factors (0.32-0.78 and 0.54-0.82, respectively)[this is what we're looking more for as unique environmental factors we can alter] affecting height at different ages were more weakly, but still substantially, correlated.
The genetic contribution to height is strong during adolescence. The high genetic correlations detected across the ages encourage further efforts to identify genes affecting growth. Common and unique environmental factors affecting height during adolescence are also important"
From childhood to adulthood, genetic differences explained 72-81% of the variation of height in boys and 65-86% in girls. Environmentalfactors common to co-twins explained 5-23% of the variation of height, with the residual variation explained by environmental factors unique to each twin individual. Common environmental factors affecting height were highly correlated between the analyzed ages (0.72-0.99 and 0.91-1.00 for boys and girls, respectively). Genetic (0.58-0.99 and 0.70-0.99, respectively) and unique environmental factors (0.32-0.78 and 0.54-0.82, respectively)[this is what we're looking more for as unique environmental factors we can alter] affecting height at different ages were more weakly, but still substantially, correlated.
The genetic contribution to height is strong during adolescence. The high genetic correlations detected across the ages encourage further efforts to identify genes affecting growth. Common and unique environmental factors affecting height during adolescence are also important"
Here's one study that shows that the environmental factor muscle loading may affect foot length.
"In 37 children with PWS, foot length (FL) before and after 6 years of growth hormone therapy (GHT) was retrospectively evaluated with parental and sibling's FL, height, and factors reflecting musculoskeletal loading, such as weight for height (WfH), lean body mass (LBM; dual energy X-ray absorptiometry, deuterium labeled water), physical activity (accellerometry), and walk age. Because of the typically biphasic evolution of body mass and the late walk age in PWS, 2 age groups were separated (group 1, >2.5 years; group 2, < or =2.5 years).
Children with PWS normalized height, but not FL after 6 years of GHT. Parental FL correlation with PWS's FL was lower than with sibling's FL. In group 1, FL positively correlated with WfH, LBM, and physical activity[after 2.5 years of age foot length correlated with physical activity, body weight, and muscle mass]. In group 2, FL negatively correlated with age at onset of independent ambulation. Foot catch-up growth with GHT was slower in group 2 compared with group 1.
In PWS, FL is positively associated with musculoskeletal loading. Small feet in children with PWS before and during long-term GHT may be more than just another dysmorphic feature, but may possibly reflect decreased musculoskeletal loading influencing foot growth and genetic and endocrine factors[decreased musculoskeletal loading may affect foot growth in all individuals and not just children with PWS]."
Children with PWS normalized height, but not FL after 6 years of GHT. Parental FL correlation with PWS's FL was lower than with sibling's FL. In group 1, FL positively correlated with WfH, LBM, and physical activity[after 2.5 years of age foot length correlated with physical activity, body weight, and muscle mass]. In group 2, FL negatively correlated with age at onset of independent ambulation. Foot catch-up growth with GHT was slower in group 2 compared with group 1.
In PWS, FL is positively associated with musculoskeletal loading. Small feet in children with PWS before and during long-term GHT may be more than just another dysmorphic feature, but may possibly reflect decreased musculoskeletal loading influencing foot growth and genetic and endocrine factors[decreased musculoskeletal loading may affect foot growth in all individuals and not just children with PWS]."
So environmental factors accounted for around at most 20% of height and less than 2% of height in some studies. Musculoskeletal loading is one such environmental factor that was found to affect foot length. Another corollary environmental factor to that is nutrition which affects body weight which is positively correlated to foot length(referred to as weight for height in the study). Is it possible that foot length could be influenced by factors other than bone length? There's arch size which may decrease with increasing loads(thus increasing foot length). Fat mass and lean body mass can contribute to foot size(however, those things can contribute to hand size as well).
Less people load their hands than walk(less people provide mechanical stimulation to hands than feet). Thus, if mechanical stimulation stimulates foot growth thus foot length should increase greater than hand length in normal individuals(as not as many people do push-ups as walk). Thus, meaning PWS individuals are less far behind in hand length than foot length. This too means that studying hand size with exercise would be an interesting study. One twin does push-ups whereas another lives life normally.
what are most important genes in adult height gain which can be stimulated or inhibited through nutrition exercise would you agree tgf beta stimulation(melatonin) myostatin inhibition (follistatin) what other genes would you say important in stature plz answer because important to my research thanks
ReplyDeletetyler at the GTF forum altitude found dangshen activated
ReplyDeletefgf2 and igf1 signaling, is this good for chondrocytes also?
Dangshen (Codonopsis pilosula) activates IGF-I and FGF-2 pathways to induce proliferation and migration effects in RSC96 Schwann cells.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20387231