| Literature DB >> 21176136 |
Paul W Franks1, Charlotte Ling.
Abstract
Obesity is a complex disease with multiple well-defined risk factors. Nevertheless, susceptibility to obesity and its sequelae within obesogenic environments varies greatly from one person to the next, suggesting a role for gene × environment interactions in the etiology of the disorder. Epigenetic regulation of the human genome provides a putative mechanism by which specific environmental exposures convey risk for obesity and other human diseases and is one possible mechanism that underlies the gene × environment/treatment interactions observed in epidemiological studies and clinical trials. A study published in BMC Medicine this month by Wang et al. reports on an examination of DNA methylation in peripheral blood leukocytes of lean and obese adolescents, comparing methylation patterns between the two groups. The authors identified two genes that were differentially methylated, both of which have roles in immune function. Here we overview the findings from this study in the context of those emerging from other recent genetic and epigenetic studies, discuss the strengths and weaknesses of the study and speculate on the future of epigenetics in chronic disease research.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 21176136 PMCID: PMC3019199 DOI: 10.1186/1741-7015-8-88
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Figure 1The mechanisms that underlie observations of gene × environment interactions made in epidemiological studies (or gene × treatment interactions in clinical trials) likely involve a combination of epigenetic and transcriptional modifications. Although environmental exposures may be the primary triggers of these perturbations, the phenotypes themselves may also feed back to trigger both epigenetic and transcriptomic events, thus modulating the expression of disease phenotypes. The figure shows a simplification of how these processes might fit together. HDAC, histone deacetyltransferase; NCor, nuclear receptor corepressor; MeCP2, methyl CpG binding protein 2.