| Literature DB >> 25935004 |
Ellen W Demerath1, Weihua Guan2, Megan L Grove3, Stella Aslibekyan4, Michael Mendelson5, Yi-Hui Zhou6, Åsa K Hedman7, Johanna K Sandling8, Li-An Li9, Marguerite R Irvin4, Degui Zhi10, Panos Deloukas11, Liming Liang12, Chunyu Liu13, Jan Bressler3, Tim D Spector14, Kari North15, Yun Li16, Devin M Absher17, Daniel Levy18, Donna K Arnett4, Myriam Fornage19, James S Pankow20, Eric Boerwinkle19.
Abstract
Obesity is an important component of the pathophysiology of chronic diseases. Identifying epigenetic modifications associated with elevated adiposity, including DNA methylation variation, may point to genomic pathways that are dysregulated in numerous conditions. The Illumina 450K Bead Chip array was used to assay DNA methylation in leukocyte DNA obtained from 2097 African American adults in the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) study. Mixed-effects regression models were used to test the association of methylation beta value with concurrent body mass index (BMI) and waist circumference (WC), and BMI change, adjusting for batch effects and potential confounders. Replication using whole-blood DNA from 2377 White adults in the Framingham Heart Study and CD4+ T cell DNA from 991 Whites in the Genetics of Lipid Lowering Drugs and Diet Network Study was followed by testing using adipose tissue DNA from 648 women in the Multiple Tissue Human Expression Resource cohort. Seventy-six BMI-related probes, 164 WC-related probes and 8 BMI change-related probes passed the threshold for significance in ARIC (P < 1 × 10(-7); Bonferroni), including probes in the recently reported HIF3A, CPT1A and ABCG1 regions. Replication using blood DNA was achieved for 37 BMI probes and 1 additional WC probe. Sixteen of these also replicated in adipose tissue, including 15 novel methylation findings near genes involved in lipid metabolism, immune response/cytokine signaling and other diverse pathways, including LGALS3BP, KDM2B, PBX1 and BBS2, among others. Adiposity traits are associated with DNA methylation at numerous CpG sites that replicate across studies despite variation in tissue type, ethnicity and analytic approaches.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25935004 PMCID: PMC4492394 DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddv161
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mol Genet ISSN: 0964-6906 Impact factor: 6.150