4.6 Article

A targeted multi-omics approach reveals paraoxonase-1 as a determinant of obesity-associated fatty liver disease

Journal

CLINICAL EPIGENETICS
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13148-021-01142-1

Keywords

PON1; NAFLD; Obesity; Genetics; Methylation; -Omics; Integrative analysis

Funding

  1. European Commission [LSHMCT-2005-018734, FP7-305707]
  2. Fund for Scientific Research (FWO) Flanders [12V5319N, 11E6921N, 1802154N]
  3. University of Antwerp [FFB180348/36572, FFB190208]

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Our study utilized a targeted multi-omics approach to investigate the interplay between PON1 genetic variants, promoter methylation, expression profile and enzymatic activity in relation to obesity-associated fatty liver disease. The findings revealed a significant correlation between alterations in PON1 status and waist-to-hip ratio as well as relevant features of liver pathology. Furthermore, a strong association of the regulatory polymorphism rs705379:C > T with more severe liver disease was identified, indicating the importance of combined genetic and epigenetic PON1 regulation in disease progression.
Background The multifactorial nature of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease cannot be explained solely by genetic factors. Recent evidence revealed that DNA methylation changes take place at proximal promoters within susceptibility genes. This emphasizes the need for integrating multiple data types to provide a better understanding of the disease's pathogenesis. One such candidate gene is paraoxonase-1 (PON1). Substantial interindividual differences in PON1 are apparent and could influence disease risk later in life. The aim of this study was therefore to determine the different regulatory aspects of PON1 variability and to examine them in relation to the predisposition to obesity-associated fatty liver disease. Results A targeted multi-omics approach was applied to investigate the interplay between PON1 genetic variants, promoter methylation, expression profile and enzymatic activity in an adult patient cohort with extensive metabolic and hepatic characterisation including liver biopsy. Alterations in PON1 status were shown to correlate with waist-to-hip ratio and relevant features of liver pathology. Particularly, the regulatory polymorphism rs705379:C > T was strongly associated with more severe liver disease. Multivariable data analysis furthermore indicated a significant association of combined genetic and epigenetic PON1 regulation. This identified relationship postulates a role for DNA methylation as a mediator between PON1 genetics and expression, which is believed to further influence liver disease progression via modifications in PON1 catalytic efficiency. Conclusions Our findings demonstrate that vertical data-integration of genetic and epigenetic regulatory mechanisms generated a more in-depth understanding of the molecular basis underlying the development of obesity-associated fatty liver disease. We gained novel insights into how NAFLD classification and outcome are orchestrated, which could not have been obtained by exclusively considering genetic variation.

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