Gunn-Helen Moen

Gunn-Helen Moen

Universitetet i Oslo

H-index: 14

Europe-Norway

About Gunn-Helen Moen

Gunn-Helen Moen, With an exceptional h-index of 14 and a recent h-index of 14 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at Universitetet i Oslo, specializes in the field of Diabetes, DOHaD, Cardiovascular disease, Genetics, Epigenetics.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

DNA methylation risk score for type 2 diabetes is associated with gestational diabetes

Intrauterine Growth and Offspring Neurodevelopmental Traits: A Mendelian Randomization Analysis of the Norwegian Mother, Father and Child Cohort Study (MoBa)

Epigenome-wide association study of DNA methylation in maternal blood leukocytes with BMI in pregnancy and gestational weight gain

Serum proteomic profiling of physical activity reveals CD300LG as a novel exerkine with a potential causal link to glucose homeostasis

Insulin and body mass index decrease serum soluble leptin receptor levels in humans

Cross-ancestry DNA methylation marks of insulin resistance in pregnancy: an integrative epigenome-wide association study

Using genomic structural equation modeling to partition the genetic covariance between birthweight and cardiometabolic risk factors into maternal and offspring components in …

Mendelian randomization study of maternal coffee consumption and its influence on birthweight, stillbirth, miscarriage, gestational age and pre-term birth

Gunn-Helen Moen Information

University

Universitetet i Oslo

Position

Post doc at

Citations(all)

988

Citations(since 2020)

961

Cited By

330

hIndex(all)

14

hIndex(since 2020)

14

i10Index(all)

18

i10Index(since 2020)

18

Email

University Profile Page

Universitetet i Oslo

Gunn-Helen Moen Skills & Research Interests

Diabetes

DOHaD

Cardiovascular disease

Genetics

Epigenetics

Top articles of Gunn-Helen Moen

DNA methylation risk score for type 2 diabetes is associated with gestational diabetes

Authors

Teresa M Linares-Pineda,Nicolas Fragoso-Bargas,María José Picón,Maria Molina-Vega,Anne Karen Jenum,Line Sletner,Sindre Lee-Ødegård,Julia O Opsahl,Gunn-Helen Moen,Elisabeth Qvigstad,Rashmi B Prasad,Kåre I Birkeland,Sonsoles Morcillo,Christine Sommer

Journal

Cardiovascular Diabetology

Published Date

2024/2/13

BackgroundGestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) share many pathophysiological factors including genetics, but whether epigenetic marks are shared is unknown. We aimed to test whether a DNA methylation risk score (MRS) for T2DM was associated with GDM across ancestry and GDM criteria.MethodsIn two independent pregnancy cohorts, EPIPREG (n = 480) and EPIDG (n = 32), DNA methylation in peripheral blood leukocytes was measured at a gestational age of 28 ± 2. We constructed an MRS in EPIPREG and EPIDG based on CpG hits from a published epigenome-wide association study (EWAS) of T2DM.ResultsWith mixed models logistic regression of EPIPREG and EPIDG, MRS for T2DM was associated with GDM: odd ratio (OR)[95% CI]: 1.3 [1.1–1.8], P = 0.002 for the unadjusted model, and 1.4 [1.1–1.7], P = 0.00014 for a model adjusted by age, pre …

Intrauterine Growth and Offspring Neurodevelopmental Traits: A Mendelian Randomization Analysis of the Norwegian Mother, Father and Child Cohort Study (MoBa)

Authors

Shannon D’Urso,Gunn-Helen Moen,Liang-Dar Hwang,Laurie J Hannigan,Elizabeth C Corfield,Helga Ask,Stefan Johannson,Pål Rasmus Njølstad,Robin N Beaumont,Rachel M Freathy,David M Evans,Alexandra Havdahl

Journal

JAMA psychiatry

Published Date

2024/2/1

ImportanceConventional epidemiological analyses have suggested that lower birth weight is associated with later neurodevelopmental difficulties; however, it is unclear whether this association is causal.ObjectiveTo investigate the relationship between intrauterine growth and offspring neurodevelopmental difficulties.Design, Setting, and ParticipantsMoBa is a population-based pregnancy cohort that recruited pregnant women from June 1999 to December 2008 included approximately 114 500 children, 95 200 mothers, and 75 200 fathers. Observational associations between birth weight and neurodevelopmental difficulties were assessed with a conventional epidemiological approach. Mendelian randomization analyses were performed to investigate the potential causal association between maternal allele scores for birth weight and offspring neurodevelopmental difficulties conditional on offspring allele …

Epigenome-wide association study of DNA methylation in maternal blood leukocytes with BMI in pregnancy and gestational weight gain

Authors

Thanh T Hoang,Sinjini Sikdar,Cheng-Jian Xu,Mi Kyeong Lee,Jonathan Cardwell,Erick Forno,Medea Imboden,Ayoung Jeong,Anne-Marie Madore,Cancan Qi,Tianyuan Wang,Brian D Bennett,James M Ward,Christine G Parks,Laura E Beane-Freeman,Debra King,Alison Motsinger-Reif,David M Umbach,Annah B Wyss,David A Schwartz,Juan C Celedón,Catherine Laprise,Carole Ober,Nicole Probst-Hensch,Ivana V Yang,Gerard H Koppelman,Stephanie J London

Journal

European Respiratory Journal

Published Date

2020/9/1

Epigenome-wide studies of methylation in children support a role for epigenetic mechanisms in asthma; however, studies in adults are rare and few have examined non-atopic asthma. We conducted the largest epigenome-wide association study (EWAS) of blood DNA methylation in adults in relation to non-atopic and atopic asthma.We measured DNA methylation in blood using the Illumina MethylationEPIC array among 2286 participants in a case-control study of current adult asthma nested within a United States agricultural cohort. Atopy was defined by serum specific immunoglobulin E (IgE). Participants were categorised as atopy without asthma (n=185), non-atopic asthma (n=673), atopic asthma (n=271), or a reference group of neither atopy nor asthma (n=1157). Analyses were conducted using logistic regression.No associations were observed with atopy without asthma. Numerous cytosine–phosphate …

Serum proteomic profiling of physical activity reveals CD300LG as a novel exerkine with a potential causal link to glucose homeostasis

Authors

Sindre Lee-Ødegård,Marit Hjorth,Thomas Olsen,Gunn-Helen Moen,Emily Daubney,David M Evans,Andrea L Hevener,Aldons J Lusis,Mingqi Zhou,Marcus M Seldin,Hooman Allayee,Jonas Krag Viken,Hanne Gulseth,Frode Norheim,Christian A Drevon,Kåre Inge Birkeland

Journal

medRxiv

Published Date

2024

Background Physical activity has been associated with preventing the development of type 2 diabetes and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. However, our understanding of the precise molecular mechanisms underlying these effects remains incomplete and good biomarkers to objectively assess physical activity are lacking. Methods We analyzed 3072 serum proteins in 26 men, normal weight or overweight, undergoing 12 weeks of a combined strength and endurance exercise intervention. We estimated insulin sensitivity with hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp, maximum oxygen uptake, muscle strength, and used MRI/MRS to evaluate body composition and organ fat depots. Muscle and subcutaneous adipose tissue biopsies were used for mRNA sequencing. Additional association analyses were performed in samples from up to 47,747 individuals in the UK Biobank, as well as using 2-sample Mendelian randomization and mice models. Results Following 12 weeks of exercise intervention, we observed significant changes in 283 serum proteins. Notably, 66 of these proteins were elevated in overweight men and positively associated with liver fat before the exercise regimen, but were normalized after exercise. Furthermore, for 19.7% and 12.1% of the exercise-responsive proteins, corresponding changes in mRNA expression levels in muscle and fat, respectively, were shown. The protein CD300LG displayed consistent alterations in blood, muscle, and fat. Serum CD300LG exhibited positive associations with insulin sensitivity, and to angiogenesis-related gene expression in both muscle and fat. Furthermore, serum CD300LG was …

Insulin and body mass index decrease serum soluble leptin receptor levels in humans

Authors

Christine Sommer,Kjersti G Vangberg,Gunn-Helen Moen,David M Evans,Sindre Lee-Ødegård,Ingvild K Blom-Høgestøl,Line Sletner,Anne K Jenum,Christian A Drevon,Hanne L Gulseth,Kåre I Birkeland

Journal

The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism

Published Date

2023/5/1

Context Serum soluble leptin receptor (sOb-R) may protect against future type 2 diabetes or serve as a marker for protective features, but how sOb-R is regulated is largely unknown. Objective This work aimed to test how serum sOb-R is influenced by glucose, insulin, body fat, body mass index (BMI), food intake, and physical activity. Methods We performed an epidemiological triangulation combining cross-sectional, interventional, and Mendelian randomization study designs. In 5 independent clinical studies (n = 24-823), sOb-R was quantified in serum or plasma by commercial enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay kits using monoclonal antibodies. We performed mixed-model regression and 2-sample Mendelian randomization. Results In pooled, cross-sectional data, leveling by study, sOb-R was associated inversely with BMI (β [95 …

Cross-ancestry DNA methylation marks of insulin resistance in pregnancy: an integrative epigenome-wide association study

Authors

Nicolas Fragoso-Bargas,Hannah R Elliott,Sindre Lee-Ødegård,Julia O Opsahl,Line Sletner,Anne Karen Jenum,Christian A Drevon,Elisabeth Qvigstad,Gunn-Helen Moen,Kåre I Birkeland,Rashmi B Prasad,Christine Sommer

Journal

Diabetes

Published Date

2023/3/1

Although there are some epigenome-wide association studies (EWAS) of insulin resistance, for most of them authors did not replicate their findings, and most are focused on populations of European ancestry, limiting the generalizability. In the Epigenetics in Pregnancy (EPIPREG; n = 294 Europeans and 162 South Asians) study, we conducted an EWAS of insulin resistance in maternal peripheral blood leukocytes, with replication in the Born in Bradford (n = 879; n = 430 Europeans and 449 South Asians), Methyl Epigenome Network Association (MENA) (n = 320), and Botnia (n = 56) cohorts. In EPIPREG, we identified six CpG sites inversely associated with insulin resistance across ancestry, of which five were replicated in independent cohorts (cg02988288, cg19693031, and cg26974062 in TXNIP; cg06690548 in SLC7A11; and cg04861640 in ZSCAN26). From methylation quantitative trait loci analysis in …

Using genomic structural equation modeling to partition the genetic covariance between birthweight and cardiometabolic risk factors into maternal and offspring components in …

Authors

Gunn-Helen Moen,Michel Nivard,Laxmi Bhatta,Nicole M Warrington,Cristen Willer,Bjørn Olav Åsvold,Ben Brumpton,David M Evans

Journal

Behavior Genetics

Published Date

2023/2

The Barker Hypothesis posits that adverse intrauterine environments result in fetal growth restriction and increased risk of cardiometabolic disease through developmental compensations. Here we introduce a new statistical model using the genomic SEM software that is capable of simultaneously partitioning the genetic covariation between birthweight and cardiometabolic traits into maternally mediated and offspring mediated contributions. We model the covariance between birthweight and later life outcomes, such as blood pressure, non-fasting glucose, blood lipids and body mass index in the Norwegian HUNT study, consisting of 15,261 mother-eldest offspring pairs with genetic and phenotypic data. Application of this model showed some evidence for maternally mediated effects of systolic blood pressure on offspring birthweight, and pleiotropy between birthweight and non-fasting glucose mediated through the …

Mendelian randomization study of maternal coffee consumption and its influence on birthweight, stillbirth, miscarriage, gestational age and pre-term birth

Authors

Caroline Brito Nunes,Peiyuan Huang,Geng Wang,Mischa Lundberg,Shannon D’Urso,Robyn E Wootton,Maria Carolina Borges,Deborah A Lawlor,Nicole M Warrington,David M Evans,Liang-Dar Hwang,Gunn-Helen Moen

Journal

International Journal of Epidemiology

Published Date

2023/2/1

Background Coffee consumption has been associated with several adverse pregnancy outcomes, although data from randomized–controlled trials are lacking. We investigate whether there is a causal relationship between coffee consumption and miscarriage, stillbirth, birthweight, gestational age and pre-term birth using Mendelian randomization (MR). Methods A two-sample MR study was performed using summary results data from a genome-wide association meta-analysis of coffee consumption (N = 91 462) from the Coffee and Caffeine Genetics Consortium. Outcomes included self-reported miscarriage (N = 49 996 cases and 174 109 controls from a large meta-analysis); the number of stillbirths [N = 60 453 from UK Biobank (UKBB)]; gestational age and pre-term birth (N = 43 568 from the 23andMe, Inc cohort) and birthweight (N = 297 356 reporting own …

GWAS summary statistics of phenotypes generated for the journal article" Mendelian randomization analysis of factors related to ovulation and reproductive function and …

Authors

Gunn-Helen Moen,David Evans,Shannon D’Urso

Published Date

2023/1/1

Genome-wide association study summary results of statistics for years ovulating, age at last live birth, and years taking the oral contraceptive pill performed in the UK Biobank in connection with the paper published due to be available publically. Details: We conducted GWAS of years of ovulating information, age at last live birth, and years of taking the contraceptive pill in the women from the UKBB, to obtain instruments for MR analyses, as there are no previously published GWASs of these traits which identify robustly associated SNPs. We used fastGWA in the Genome-wide Complex Trait Analysis (GCTA) software to conduct the analyses, which utilizes a linear mixed model to account for population stratification and cryptic relatedness. Imputed variants with an INFO score > 0.8, MAF > 0.0001, and missingness rate < 0.10 were used for the GWAS analyses, resulting in a total of N = 18,557,407 SNPs …

Epigenome-wide association study of serum folate in maternal peripheral blood leukocytes

Authors

Nicolas Fragoso-Bargas,Christian M Page,Bonnie R Joubert,Stephanie J London,Sindre Lee-Ødegård,Julia O Opsahl,Line Sletner,Anne K Jenum,Elisabeth Qvigstad,Rashmi B Prasad,Gunn-Helen Moen,Kåre I Birkeland,Christine Sommer

Journal

Epigenomics

Published Date

2023/1

Aim To perform an epigenome-wide association study (EWAS) of serum folate in maternal blood. Methods Cross-ancestry (Europeans = 302, South Asians = 161) and ancestry-specific EWAS in the EPIPREG cohort were performed, followed by methyl quantitative trait loci analysis and association with cardiometabolic phenotypes. Replication was attempted using maternal folate intake and blood methylation data from the MoBa study and verified if the findings were significant in a previous EWAS of maternal serum folate in cord blood. Results & conclusion cg19888088 (cross-ancestry) in EBF3, cg01952260 (Europeans) and cg07077240 (South Asians) in HERC3 were associated with serum folate. cg19888088 and cg01952260 were associated with diastolic blood pressure. cg07077240 was associated with variants in CASC15. The findings were not replicated and were not significant in cord blood.

Genome-wide association study of placental weight identifies distinct and shared genetic influences between placental and fetal growth

Authors

Robin N Beaumont,Christopher Flatley,Marc Vaudel,Xiaoping Wu,Jing Chen,Gunn-Helen Moen,Line Skotte,Øyvind Helgeland,Pol Solé-Navais,Karina Banasik,Clara Albiñana,Justiina Ronkainen,João Fadista,Sara Elizabeth Stinson,Katerina Trajanoska,Carol A Wang,David Westergaard,Sundararajan Srinivasan,Carlos Sánchez-Soriano,Jose Ramon Bilbao,Catherine Allard,Marika Groleau,Teemu Kuulasmaa,Daniel J Leirer,Frédérique White,Pierre-Étienne Jacques,Haoxiang Cheng,Ke Hao,Ole A Andreassen,Bjørn Olav Åsvold,Mustafa Atalay,Laxmi Bhatta,Luigi Bouchard,Ben Michael Brumpton,Søren Brunak,Jonas Bybjerg-Grauholm,Cathrine Ebbing,Paul Elliott,Line Engelbrechtsen,Christian Erikstrup,Marisa Estarlich,Stephen Franks,Romy Gaillard,Frank Geller,Jakob Grove,David M Hougaard,Eero Kajantie,Camilla S Morgen,Ellen A Nohr,Mette Nyegaard,Colin NA Palmer,Ole Birger Pedersen,Early Growth Genetics (EGG) Consortium,Fernando Rivadeneira,Sylvain Sebert,Beverley M Shields,Camilla Stoltenberg,Ida Surakka,Lise Wegner Thørner,Henrik Ullum,Marja Vaarasmaki,Bjarni J Vilhjalmsson,Cristen J Willer,Timo A Lakka,Dorte Gybel-Brask,Mariona Bustamante,Torben Hansen,Ewan R Pearson,Rebecca M Reynolds,Sisse R Ostrowski,Craig E Pennell,Vincent WV Jaddoe,Janine F Felix,Andrew T Hattersley,Mads Melbye,Deborah A Lawlor,Kristian Hveem,Thomas Werge,Henriette Svarre Nielsen,Per Magnus,David M Evans,Bo Jacobsson,Marjo-Riitta Järvelin,Ge Zhang,Marie-France Hivert,Stefan Johansson,Rachel M Freathy,Bjarke Feenstra,Pål R Njølstad

Journal

Nature Genetics

Published Date

2023/11

A well-functioning placenta is essential for fetal and maternal health throughout pregnancy. Using placental weight as a proxy for placental growth, we report genome-wide association analyses in the fetal (n = 65,405), maternal (n = 61,228) and paternal (n = 52,392) genomes, yielding 40 independent association signals. Twenty-six signals are classified as fetal, four maternal and three fetal and maternal. A maternal parent-of-origin effect is seen near KCNQ1. Genetic correlation and colocalization analyses reveal overlap with birth weight genetics, but 12 loci are classified as predominantly or only affecting placental weight, with connections to placental development and morphology, and transport of antibodies and amino acids. Mendelian randomization analyses indicate that fetal genetically mediated higher placental weight is causally associated with preeclampsia risk and shorter gestational duration …

Woolf et als GWAS by subtraction is not useful for cross-generational Mendelian randomization studies

Authors

David M Evans,George Davey Smith,Gunn-Helen Moen

Journal

arXiv preprint arXiv:2308.14942

Published Date

2023/8/28

Mendelian randomization (MR) is an epidemiological method that can be used to strengthen causal inference regarding the relationship between a modifiable environmental exposure and a medically relevant trait and to estimate the magnitude of this relationship1. Recently, there has been considerable interest in using MR to examine potential causal relationships between parental phenotypes and outcomes amongst their offspring. In a recent issue of BMC Research Notes, Woolf et al (2023) present a new method, GWAS by subtraction, to derive genome-wide summary statistics for paternal smoking and other paternal phenotypes with the goal that these estimates can then be used in downstream (including two sample) MR studies. Whilst a potentially useful goal, Woolf et al. (2023) focus on the wrong parameter of interest for useful genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and downstream cross-generational MR studies, and the estimator that they derive is neither efficient nor appropriate for such use.

Direct and INdirect effects analysis of Genetic lOci (DINGO): A software package to increase the power of locus discovery in GWAS meta-analyses of perinatal phenotypes and …

Authors

Liang-Dar Hwang,Gabriel Cuellar-Partida,Loic Yengo,Jian Zeng,Robin N Beaumont,Rachel M Freathy,Gunn-Helen Moen,Nicole M Warrington,David M Evans

Journal

medRxiv

Published Date

2023/8/28

Perinatal traits are influenced by genetic variants from both fetal and maternal genomes. Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of these phenotypes have typically involved separate fetal and maternal scans, however, this approach may be inefficient as it does not utilize the information shared across the individual GWAS. In this manuscript we investigate the performance of three strategies to detect loci in maternal and fetal GWAS of the same trait:(i) the traditional strategy of analysing maternal and fetal GWAS separately;(ii) a novel two degree of freedom test which combines information from maternal and fetal GWAS; and (iii) a novel one degree of freedom test where signals from maternal and fetal GWAS are meta-analysed together conditional on the estimated sample overlap. We demonstrate through a combination of analytical formulae and data simulation that the optimal strategy depends on the extent of …

Genetic effects on the timing of parturition and links to fetal birth weight (vol 55, pg 559, 2023)

Authors

Pol Solé-Navais,Christopher Flatley,Valgerdur Steinthorsdottir,Marc Vaudel,Julius Juodakis,Jing Chen,Triin Laisk,Abigail L LaBella,David Westergaard,Jonas Bacelis,Ben Brumpton,Line Skotte,Maria C Borges,Øyvind Helgeland,Anubha Mahajan,Matthias Wielscher,Frederick Lin,Catherine Briggs,Carol A Wang,Gunn-Helen Moen,Robin N Beaumont,Jonathan P Bradfield,Abin Abraham,Gudmar Thorleifsson,Maiken E Gabrielsen,Sisse R Ostrowski,Dominika Modzelewska,Ellen A Nohr,Elina Hypponen,Amit Srivastava,Octavious Talbot,Catherine Allard,Scott M Williams,Ramkumar Menon,Beverley M Shields,Gardar Sveinbjornsson,Huan Xu,Mads Melbye,William Lowe Jr,Luigi Bouchard,Emily Oken,Ole B Pedersen,Daniel F Gudbjartsson,Christian Erikstrup,Erik Sørensen,Early Growth Genetics Consortium McCarthy Mark I. 16,Estonian Biobank Research Team,Danish Blood Donor Study Genomic Consortium,Rolv T Lie,Kari Teramo,Mikko Hallman,Thorhildur Juliusdottir,Hakon Hakonarson,Henrik Ullum,Andrew T Hattersley,Line Sletner,Mario Merialdi,Sheryl L Rifas-Shiman,Thora Steingrimsdottir,Denise Scholtens,Christine Power,Jane West,Mette Nyegaard,John A Capra,Anne H Skogholt,Per Magnus,Ole A Andreassen,Unnur Thorsteinsdottir,Struan FA Grant,Elisabeth Qvigstad,Craig E Pennell,Marie-France Hivert,Geoffrey M Hayes,Marjo-Riitta Jarvelin,Mark I McCarthy,Deborah A Lawlor,Henriette S Nielsen,Reedik Mägi,Antonis Rokas,Kristian Hveem,Kari Stefansson,Bjarke Feenstra,Pål Njolstad,Louis J Muglia,Rachel M Freathy,Stefan Johansson,Ge Zhang,Bo Jacobsson

Journal

Nature Genetics

Published Date

2023/4

The timing of parturition is crucial for neonatal survival and infant health. Yet, its genetic basis remains largely unresolved. We present a maternal genome-wide meta-analysis of gestational duration (n = 195,555), identifying 22 associated loci (24 independent variants) and an enrichment in genes differentially expressed during labor. A meta-analysis of preterm delivery (18,797 cases, 260,246 controls) revealed seven associated loci and large genetic similarities with gestational duration. Analysis of the parental transmitted and nontransmitted alleles (n = 136,833) shows that 15 of the gestational duration genetic variants act through the maternal genome, whereas 7 act both through the maternal and fetal genomes and 2 act only via the fetal genome. Finally, the maternal effects on gestational duration show signs of antagonistic pleiotropy with the fetal effects on birth weight: maternal alleles that increase …

Author Correction: Genetic effects on the timing of parturition and links to fetal birth weight

Authors

Pol Solé-Navais,Christopher Flatley,Valgerdur Steinthorsdottir,Marc Vaudel,Julius Juodakis,Jing Chen,Triin Laisk,Abigail L LaBella,David Westergaard,Jonas Bacelis,Ben Brumpton,Line Skotte,Maria C Borges,Øyvind Helgeland,Anubha Mahajan,Matthias Wielscher,Frederick Lin,Catherine Briggs,Carol A Wang,Gunn-Helen Moen,Robin N Beaumont,Jonathan P Bradfield,Abin Abraham,Gudmar Thorleifsson,Maiken E Gabrielsen,Sisse R Ostrowski,Dominika Modzelewska,Ellen A Nohr,Elina Hypponen,Amit Srivastava,Octavious Talbot,Catherine Allard,Scott M Williams,Ramkumar Menon,Beverley M Shields,Gardar Sveinbjornsson,Huan Xu,Mads Melbye,William Lowe Jr,Luigi Bouchard,Emily Oken,Ole B Pedersen,Daniel F Gudbjartsson,Christian Erikstrup,Erik Sørensen,Early Growth Genetics Consortium McCarthy Mark I. 16,Estonian Biobank Research Team,Danish Blood Donor Study Genomic Consortium,Rolv T Lie,Kari Teramo,Mikko Hallman,Thorhildur Juliusdottir,Hakon Hakonarson,Henrik Ullum,Andrew T Hattersley,Line Sletner,Mario Merialdi,Sheryl L Rifas-Shiman,Thora Steingrimsdottir,Denise Scholtens,Christine Power,Jane West,Mette Nyegaard,John A Capra,Anne H Skogholt,Per Magnus,Ole A Andreassen,Unnur Thorsteinsdottir,Struan FA Grant,Elisabeth Qvigstad,Craig E Pennell,Marie-France Hivert,Geoffrey M Hayes,Marjo-Riitta Jarvelin,Mark I McCarthy,Deborah A Lawlor,Henriette S Nielsen,Reedik Mägi,Antonis Rokas,Kristian Hveem,Kari Stefansson,Bjarke Feenstra,Pål Njolstad,Louis J Muglia,Rachel M Freathy,Stefan Johansson,Ge Zhang,Bo Jacobsson

Journal

nature genetics

Published Date

2023/7

In the version of this article originally published, the surname of author Stefan Johansson was misspelled as Johanson. In the abstract and “Genome-wide association analyses” section of the Results, the number of loci associated with preterm birth was shown as six instead of seven. In addition, there was a production error in the Figure 1a y-axis units shown below 0, where “10” and “20” were shown as negative numbers. The errors have been corrected in the HTML and PDF versions of the article.

Mendelian randomization analysis of factors related to ovulation and reproductive function and endometrial cancer risk

Authors

Shannon D’Urso,Pooja Arumugam,Therese Weider,Liang-Dar Hwang,Tom A Bond,John P Kemp,Nicole M Warrington,David M Evans,Tracy A O’Mara,Gunn-Helen Moen

Journal

BMC medicine

Published Date

2022/11/1

BackgroundObservational epidemiological studies suggest a link between several factors related to ovulation and reproductive function and endometrial cancer (EC) risk; however, it is not clear whether these relationships are causal, and whether the risk factors act independently of each other. The aim of this study was to investigate putative causal relationships between the number of live births, age at last live birth, and years ovulating and EC risk. MethodsWe conducted a series of observational analyses to investigate various risk factors and EC risk in the UK Biobank (UKBB). Additionally, multivariate analysis was performed to elucidate the relationship between the number of live births, age at last live birth, and years ovulating and other related factors such as age at natural menopause, age at menarche, and body mass index (BMI). Secondly, we used Mendelian randomization (MR) to assess if these observed …

Multi-ancestry genome-wide association study of gestational diabetes mellitus highlights genetic links with type 2 diabetes

Authors

Natalia Pervjakova,Gunn-Helen Moen,Maria-Carolina Borges,Teresa Ferreira,James P Cook,Catherine Allard,Robin N Beaumont,Mickaël Canouil,Gad Hatem,Anni Heiskala,Anni Joensuu,Ville Karhunen,Soo Heon Kwak,Frederick TJ Lin,Jun Liu,Sheryl Rifas-Shiman,Claudia H Tam,Wing Hung Tam,Gudmar Thorleifsson,Toby Andrew,Juha Auvinen,Bishwajit Bhowmik,Amélie Bonnefond,Fabien Delahaye,Ayse Demirkan,Philippe Froguel,Kadri Haller-Kikkatalo,Hildur Hardardottir,Sandra Hummel,Akhtar Hussain,Eero Kajantie,Elina Keikkala,Amna Khamis,Jari Lahti,Tove Lekva,Sanna Mustaniemi,Christine Sommer,Aili Tagoma,Evangelia Tzala,Raivo Uibo,Marja Vääräsmäki,Pia M Villa,Kåre I Birkeland,Luigi Bouchard,Cornelia M Duijn,Sarah Finer,Leif Groop,Esa Hämäläinen,Geoffrey M Hayes,Graham A Hitman,Hak C Jang,Marjo-Riitta Järvelin,Anne Karen Jenum,Hannele Laivuori,Ronald C Ma,Olle Melander,Emily Oken,Kyong Soo Park,Patrice Perron,Rashmi B Prasad,Elisabeth Qvigstad,Sylvain Sebert,Kari Stefansson,Valgerdur Steinthorsdottir,Tiinamaija Tuomi,Marie-France Hivert,Paul W Franks,Mark I McCarthy,Cecilia M Lindgren,Rachel M Freathy,Deborah A Lawlor,Andrew P Morris,Reedik Mägi

Journal

Human molecular genetics

Published Date

2022/10/1

Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is associated with increased risk of pregnancy complications and adverse perinatal outcomes. GDM often reoccurs and is associated with increased risk of subsequent diagnosis of type 2 diabetes (T2D). To improve our understanding of the aetiological factors and molecular processes driving the occurrence of GDM, including the extent to which these overlap with T2D pathophysiology, the GENetics of Diabetes In Pregnancy Consortium assembled genome-wide association studies of diverse ancestry in a total of 5485 women with GDM and 347 856 without GDM. Through multi-ancestry meta-analysis, we identified five loci with genome-wide significant association (P < 5 × 10−8) with GDM, mapping to/near MTNR1B (P = 4.3 × 10−54), TCF7L2 (P = 4.0 × 10−16), CDKAL1 (P = 1.6 × 10−14), CDKN2A-CDKN2B (P = 4.1 × 10−9) and HKDC1 (P = 2.9 × 10 …

Using adopted individuals to partition indirect maternal genetic effects into prenatal and postnatal effects on offspring phenotypes

Authors

Liang-Dar Hwang,Gunn-Helen Moen,David M Evans

Journal

Elife

Published Date

2022/7/13

Maternal genetic effects can be defined as the effect of a mother’s genotype on the phenotype of her offspring, independent of the offspring’s genotype. Maternal genetic effects can act via the intrauterine environment during pregnancy and/or via the postnatal environment. In this manuscript, we present a simple extension to the basic adoption design that uses structural equation modelling (SEM) to partition maternal genetic effects into prenatal and postnatal effects. We examine the power, utility and type I error rate of our model using simulations and asymptotic power calculations. We apply our model to polygenic scores of educational attainment and birth weight associated variants, in up to 5,178 adopted singletons, 943 trios, 2687 mother-offspring pairs, 712 father-offspring pairs and 347,980 singletons from the UK Biobank. Our results show the expected pattern of maternal genetic effects on offspring birth weight, but unexpectedly large prenatal maternal genetic effects on offspring educational attainment. Sensitivity and simulation analyses suggest this result may be at least partially due to adopted individuals in the UK Biobank being raised by their biological relatives. We show that accurate modelling of these sorts of cryptic relationships is sufficient to bring type I error rate under control and produce asymptotically unbiased estimates of prenatal and postnatal maternal genetic effects. We conclude that there would be considerable value in following up adopted individuals in the UK Biobank to determine whether they were raised by their biological relatives, and if so, to precisely ascertain the nature of these relationships. These adopted …

Investigating a potential causal relationship between maternal blood pressure during pregnancy and future offspring cardiometabolic health

Authors

Geng Wang,Laxmi Bhatta,Gunn-Helen Moen,Liang-Dar Hwang,John P Kemp,Tom A Bond,Bjørn Olav Åsvold,Ben Brumpton,David M Evans,Nicole M Warrington

Journal

Hypertension

Published Date

2022/1

Observational epidemiological studies have reported that higher maternal blood pressure (BP) during pregnancy is associated with increased future risk of offspring cardiometabolic disease. However, it is unclear whether this association represents a causal relationship through intrauterine mechanisms. We used a Mendelian randomization (MR) framework to examine the relationship between unweighted maternal genetic scores for systolic BP and diastolic BP and a range of cardiometabolic risk factors in the offspring of up to 29 708 genotyped mother-offspring pairs from the UKB study (UK Biobank) and the HUNT study (Trøndelag Health). We conducted similar analyses in up to 21 423 father-offspring pairs from the same cohorts. We confirmed that the BP-associated genetic variants from the general population sample also had similar effects on maternal BP during pregnancy in independent cohorts. We did …

A cautionary note on using Mendelian randomization to examine the Barker hypothesis and Developmental Origins of Health and Disease (DOHaD)

Authors

Shannon D’Urso,Geng Wang,Liang-Dar Hwang,Gunn-Helen Moen,Nicole M Warrington,David M Evans

Journal

Journal of Developmental Origins of Health and Disease

Published Date

2021/10

Recent studies have used Mendelian randomization (MR) to investigate the observational association between low birth weight (BW) and increased risk of cardiometabolic outcomes, specifically cardiovascular disease, glycemic traits, and type 2 diabetes (T2D), and inform on the validity of the Barker hypothesis. We used simulations to assess the validity of these previous MR studies, and to determine whether a better formulated model can be used in this context. Genetic and phenotypic data were simulated under a model of no direct causal effect of offspring BW on cardiometabolic outcomes and no effect of maternal genotype on offspring cardiometabolic risk through intrauterine mechanisms; where the observational relationship between BW and cardiometabolic risk was driven entirely by horizontal genetic pleiotropy in the offspring (i.e. offspring genetic variants affecting both BW and cardiometabolic disease …

See List of Professors in Gunn-Helen Moen University(Universitetet i Oslo)

Gunn-Helen Moen FAQs

What is Gunn-Helen Moen's h-index at Universitetet i Oslo?

The h-index of Gunn-Helen Moen has been 14 since 2020 and 14 in total.

What are Gunn-Helen Moen's top articles?

The articles with the titles of

DNA methylation risk score for type 2 diabetes is associated with gestational diabetes

Intrauterine Growth and Offspring Neurodevelopmental Traits: A Mendelian Randomization Analysis of the Norwegian Mother, Father and Child Cohort Study (MoBa)

Epigenome-wide association study of DNA methylation in maternal blood leukocytes with BMI in pregnancy and gestational weight gain

Serum proteomic profiling of physical activity reveals CD300LG as a novel exerkine with a potential causal link to glucose homeostasis

Insulin and body mass index decrease serum soluble leptin receptor levels in humans

Cross-ancestry DNA methylation marks of insulin resistance in pregnancy: an integrative epigenome-wide association study

Using genomic structural equation modeling to partition the genetic covariance between birthweight and cardiometabolic risk factors into maternal and offspring components in …

Mendelian randomization study of maternal coffee consumption and its influence on birthweight, stillbirth, miscarriage, gestational age and pre-term birth

...

are the top articles of Gunn-Helen Moen at Universitetet i Oslo.

What are Gunn-Helen Moen's research interests?

The research interests of Gunn-Helen Moen are: Diabetes, DOHaD, Cardiovascular disease, Genetics, Epigenetics

What is Gunn-Helen Moen's total number of citations?

Gunn-Helen Moen has 988 citations in total.

What are the co-authors of Gunn-Helen Moen?

The co-authors of Gunn-Helen Moen are George Davey Smith, Michael Neale, Cristen J. Willer, Kåre I. Birkeland, Bjørn Olav Åsvold.

    Co-Authors

    H-index: 285
    George Davey Smith

    George Davey Smith

    University of Bristol

    H-index: 144
    Michael Neale

    Michael Neale

    Virginia Commonwealth University

    H-index: 98
    Cristen J. Willer

    Cristen J. Willer

    University of Michigan

    H-index: 71
    Kåre I. Birkeland

    Kåre I. Birkeland

    Universitetet i Oslo

    H-index: 59
    Bjørn Olav Åsvold

    Bjørn Olav Åsvold

    Norges teknisk-naturvitenskaplige universitet

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