Literature DB >> 27185256

DNA hypermethylation of CD3(+) T cells from cord blood of infants exposed to intrauterine growth restriction.

Lyda Williams1, Yoshinori Seki1, Fabien Delahaye2, Alex Cheng1, Mamta Fuloria3, Francine Hughes Einstein2, Maureen J Charron4,5,6.   

Abstract

AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) is associated with increased susceptibility to obesity, metabolic syndrome and type 2 diabetes. Although the mechanisms underlying the developmental origins of metabolic disease are poorly understood, evidence suggests that epigenomic alterations play a critical role. We sought to identify changes in DNA methylation patterns that are associated with IUGR in CD3(+) T cells purified from umbilical cord blood obtained from male newborns who were appropriate for gestational age (AGA) or who had been exposed to IUGR.
METHODS: CD3(+) T cells were isolated from cord blood obtained from IUGR and AGA infants. The genome-wide methylation profile in eight AGA and seven IUGR samples was determined using the HELP tagging assay. Validation analysis using targeted bisulfite sequencing and bisulfite massARRAY was performed on the original cohort as well as biological replicates consisting of two AGA and four IUGR infants. The Segway algorithm was used to identify methylation changes within regulatory regions of the genome.
RESULTS: A global shift towards hypermethylation in IUGR was seen compared with AGA (89.8% of 4,425 differentially methylated loci), targeted to regulatory regions of the genome, specifically promoters and enhancers. Pathway analysis identified dysregulation of pathways involved in metabolic disease (type 2 diabetes mellitus, insulin signalling, mitogen-activated protein kinase signalling) and T cell development, regulation and activation (T cell receptor signalling), as well as transcription factors (TCF3, LEF1 and NFATC) that regulate T cells. Furthermore, bump-hunting analysis revealed differentially methylated regions in PRDM16 and HLA-DPB1, genes important for adipose tissue differentiation, stem cell maintenance and function and T cell activation. CONCLUSIONS/
INTERPRETATION: Our findings suggest that the alterations in methylation patterns observed in IUGR CD3(+) T cells may have functional consequences in targeted genes, regulatory regions and transcription factors. These may serve as biomarkers to identify those at 'high risk' for diminished attainment of full health potential who can benefit from early interventions. ACCESS TO RESEARCH MATERIALS: HELP tagging data: Gene Expression Omnibus database (GSE77268), scheduled to be released on 25 January 2019.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Human; Metabolic syndrome; Prediction of type 2 diabetes

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27185256     DOI: 10.1007/s00125-016-3983-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Diabetologia        ISSN: 0012-186X            Impact factor:   10.122


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