Genetic influences on diet in young Swedish adults: a twin study
Lisa Kastenbom, Simon Haworth, Linda Eriksson, Ralf Kuja-Halkola, Ingegerd Johansson, Anders Esberg

TL;DR
This study explores how genes and environment influence diet in young Swedish adults, finding that genetics play a significant role in dietary choices and taste preferences.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into the genetic and environmental contributions to diverse dietary traits in young adults using a large twin sample.
Findings
Genetic influences on dietary traits ranged from 20% to 61%, with higher heritability for overall dietary patterns and bitter taste preferences.
Heritability varied across food groups and nutrients, with venison and fiber showing the highest genetic contributions.
Nonshared environmental factors also significantly influenced dietary behaviors, suggesting individual-specific experiences shape eating habits.
Abstract
Dietary choices are shaped by both genetic predisposition and environmental exposures, yet the relative influence of these factors remains insufficiently understood across populations and age groups. Young adulthood represents a critical period when long-term eating habits take form, and clarifying the determinants of dietary behavior in this life stage may inform strategies to promote sustained health. This twin study aimed to estimate genetic and environmental contributions to food, energy, and nutrient intakes, and taste preferences in young adults in Sweden. The study included 2832 Swedish twins (858 monozygotic and 1974 dizygotic; mean age 24 y; 59.5% female). Participants completed a validated dietary questionnaire assessing food intake frequencies and taste preferences. Additive genetic (A), shared environmental (C), and nonshared environmental (E) influences on a priori…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNutrition, Genetics, and Disease · Nutritional Studies and Diet · Obesity, Physical Activity, Diet
