African Americans have the highest rate of age-adjusted obesity (48 percent) of all ethnic groups, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (By contrast, the rate for non-Hispanic whites is 34.5 percent.) A recently discovered genetic variant unique to African Americans may help explain why.
About 1 percent of African Americans, West Africans and others of African ancestry carry a variant of the semaphorin-4D (SEMA4D) gene, which increases their obesity risk.
“So far, we have not seen this variant in non-African Americans or non-Africans,” says Charles N. Rotimi, chief of the National Human Genome Research Institute’s metabolic, cardiovascular and inflammatory disease genomics branch, who led the study that found the variant. “Not everyone who carries it is obese, but if you carry it, your risk of obesity is very high.”
To investigate the genomic basis of obesity in continental Africans, Rotimi and colleagues scanned the complete sets of DNA of thousands of individuals, looking for genetic changes linked to obesity. That’s where they found the variant, which is absent in both Europeans and Asians.