4.5 Article

Impact of age, BMI and HbA1c levels on the genome-wide DNA methylation and mRNA expression patterns in human adipose tissue and identification of epigenetic biomarkers in blood

期刊

HUMAN MOLECULAR GENETICS
卷 24, 期 13, 页码 3792-3813

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddv124

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资金

  1. Swedish Research Council
  2. Region Skane (ALF)
  3. Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation
  4. Novo Nordisk Foundation
  5. EFSD/Lilly Fellowship
  6. Soderberg Foundation
  7. Swedish Diabetes foundation
  8. Pahlsson Foundation
  9. EXODIAB
  10. Linne grant [B31 5631/2006]
  11. Danish Strategic Research Council
  12. Danish Council for Independent Research
  13. Rigshospitalet
  14. University of Copenhagen
  15. Steno Diabetes Center
  16. Danish Diabetes Academy
  17. Jane and Dan Olsson Foundation
  18. Swedish federal government under the LUA/ALF [ALFGBG-136481]
  19. Regional Research and Development agreement [VGFOUREG-5171, VGFOUREG-11296, VGFOUREG-7861]
  20. Lundbeck Foundation (The Lundbeck Foundation Centre for Applied Medical Genomics in Personalised Disease Prediction, Prevention and Care [LuCamp])
  21. Novo Nordisk Fonden [NNF14OC0010995, NNF15OC0015902, NNF11OC1014546] Funding Source: researchfish

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Increased age, BMI and HbA1c levels are risk factors for several non-communicable diseases. However, the impact of these factors on the genome-wide DNA methylation pattern in human adipose tissue remains unknown. We analyzed the DNA methylation of similar to 480 000 sites in human adipose tissue from 96 males and 94 females and related methylation to age, BMI and HbA1c. We also compared epigenetic signatures in adipose tissue and blood. Age was significantly associated with both altered DNA methylation and expression of 1050 genes (e.g. FHL2, NOX4 and PLG). Interestingly, many reported epigenetic biomarkers of aging in blood, including ELOVL2, FHL2, KLF14 and GLRA1, also showed significant correlations between adipose tissue DNA methylation and age in our study. The most significant association between age and adipose tissue DNA methylation was found upstream of ELOVL2. We identified 2825 genes (e.g. FTO, ITIH5, CCL18, MTCH2, IRS1 and SPP1) where both DNA methylation and expression correlated with BMI. Methylation at previously reported HIF3A sites correlated significantly with BMI in females only. HbA1c (range 28-46 mmol/mol) correlated significantly with the methylation of 711 sites, annotated to, for example, RAB37, TICAM1 and HLA-DPB1. Pathway analyses demonstrated that methylation levels associated with age and BMI are overrepresented among genes involved in cancer, type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease. Our results highlight the impact of age, BMI and HbA1c on epigenetic variation of candidate genes for obesity, type 2 diabetes and cancer in human adipose tissue. Importantly, we demonstrate that epigenetic biomarkers in blood can mirror age-related epigenetic signatures in target tissues for metabolic diseases such as adipose tissue.

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