Behavioural susceptibility to environmental influences in obesity- evidence from a companion animal model.
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Abstract
UNLABELLED: Obesity is often pejoratively viewed as the consequence of poor self-restraint with the influence of genetics on individuals’ drive to eat overlooked. We studied pet dogs (Canis familiaris) as a compelling animal model in which obesity develops spontaneously, subject to similar environmental influences as in their human counterparts and in which artificial selection means dogs within a breed are genetically homogeneous. In electronic health records from 1.1 million dogs, we showed wide variation in the probability of obesity in different breeds, evidence that obesity is highly heritable in this species. Using a validated questionnaire in ~ 15,000 dog/owner dyads we show that food motivation is a key driver of obesity in dogs, and that high food motivation renders affected dogs particularly susceptible to an obesogenic environment. As well as being of veterinary interest, this is of relevance to human obesity as compelling, data-driven evidence of how behavioural susceptibility to environmental risk governs obesity outcome. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s12917-025-04990-8.
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Acknowledgements: We are indebted to the owners who volunteered for the study and to the dogs who took part, as well as to the more than 1,000 Banfield clinicians who diligently recorded their observations in the Banfield medical records over the period of this study. Without that collective effort this work would not have been possible.
Funder: Dogs Trust; doi: https://doi.org/10.13039/501100021270
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1746-6148
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Wellcome Trust (205187/Z/16/Z)

