| Literature DB >> 34025578 |
Nazia Parveen1, Sangeeta Dhawan1.
Abstract
Pancreatic beta cells play a central role in regulating glucose homeostasis by secreting the hormone insulin. Failure of beta cells due to reduced function and mass and the resulting insulin insufficiency can drive the dysregulation of glycemic control, causing diabetes. Epigenetic regulation by DNA methylation is central to shaping the gene expression patterns that define the fully functional beta cell phenotype and regulate beta cell growth. Establishment of stage-specific DNA methylation guides beta cell differentiation during fetal development, while faithful restoration of these signatures during DNA replication ensures the maintenance of beta cell identity and function in postnatal life. Lineage-specific transcription factor networks interact with methylated DNA at specific genomic regions to enhance the regulatory specificity and ensure the stability of gene expression patterns. Recent genome-wide DNA methylation profiling studies comparing islets from diabetic and non-diabetic human subjects demonstrate the perturbation of beta cell DNA methylation patterns, corresponding to the dysregulation of gene expression associated with mature beta cell state in diabetes. This article will discuss the molecular underpinnings of shaping the islet DNA methylation landscape, its mechanistic role in the specification and maintenance of the functional beta cell phenotype, and its dysregulation in diabetes. We will also review recent advances in utilizing beta cell specific DNA methylation patterns for the development of biomarkers for diabetes, and targeting DNA methylation to develop translational approaches for supplementing the functional beta cell mass deficit in diabetes.Entities:
Keywords: DNA methylation; beta cells; diabetes; epigenetics; insulin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34025578 PMCID: PMC8137853 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2021.651258
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1Schematic representation of DNA methylation patterning: The establishment of new DNA methylation patterns during development is regulated by the activity of de novo DNA methyltransferases, while activity of maintenance DNA methyltransferases serves to perpetuate these patterns during successive rounds of cell division. DNA methylation marks can be reversed through active or passive demethylation. Active demethylation involves the successive enzymatic oxidation of 5-methylcytosine (5mC) to 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC),5-formylcytosine (5fC), and 5-carboxylcytosine (5caC) by TET (Ten-eleven translocation) dioxygenases, followed by thymine DNA glycosylase (TDG) dependent removal of 5fC and 5caC, coupled with base-excision repair to a cytosine (C). A hemi-methylated 5hmC is not recognized by the maintenance DNA methyltransferases and can get diluted and lost during replication, thus contributing to passive demethylation. Disruption of maintenance methyltransferase activity can similarly result in replication dependent dilution of DNA methylation.
Figure 2Regulatory role of DNA methylation in beta cell homeostasis: Pancreas morphogenesis requires intact maintenance methylation activity of Dnmt1 in Pdx1+ pancreatic progenitors, and loss of Dnmt1 in pancreatic progenitors leads to pancreatic atrophy. Specification of different endocrine lineages from the Neurog3+ endocrine progenitors involves the DNA methylation dependent regulation of the expression of lineage-specific transcription factors. The endocrine progenitors that co-express Myt1, are marked by high expression of Dnmt1 and hypermethylation of the enhancer region of Arx, a key alpha cell lineage determinant. This leads to repression of Arx and commitment of the Neurog3+ Myt1+ sub-population to beta cell lineage, while the Neurog3+ Myt1- sub-population acquires alpha cell lineage. Functional maturation of beta cells is neonatal life depends on DNA methylation patterning of genes involved in metabolism and replication. The fully differentiated beta cell phenotype is guarded by maintenance methylation through replication, and loss of Dnmt1 in beta cells leads to their trans-differentiation into alpha cells. The proliferative capacity and function of beta cell changes with age, and involves age dependent changes in the beta cell methylome.
Figure 3Key players involved in DNA methylation dependent regulation of beta cell identity: Hypermethylation of the alpha cell lineage regulator gene, Arx, represses its expression in beta cells, while hypomethylation of Pdx1 and Pax4 in beta cells is essential to maintain their expression. The specificity of DNA methylation patterning is ensured by the interaction of DNA methyltransferase Dnmt3a with transcription factors Nkx2.2 and Nkx6.1, allowing recruitment to specific sites. Once established, the beta cell specific DNA methylation patterns are maintained by the maintenance methyltransferase Dnmt1.
DNA methylation studies in islets from T2D subjects, techniques utilized, and the key findings.
| Study comparing T2D versus non-diabetic islets | Technique utilized to study methylation status | Samples | Key finding |
|---|---|---|---|
| ( | Bisulfite sequencing of the islet DNA | 10 diabetic and 9 non-diabetic subjects |
|
| ( | Sequenom’s MassARRAY Epi-TYPER protocol | 9 diabetic and 48 non-diabetic subjects |
|
| ( | Sequenom’s MassARRAY EpiTYPER protocol | 9 diabetic and 55 non-diabetic subjects | Distal promoter and enhancer of |
| ( | Infinium HumanMethylation27K BeadChip Assay | 5 diabetic and 11 non-diabetic subjects | 276 CpG loci affiliated to promoters of 254 genes showed differential DNA methylation in T2D islets |
| ( | Sequenom’s MassARRAY EpiTYPER protocol | 10 diabetic and 55 non-diabetic subjects |
|
| ( | Infinium HumanMethylation450K BeadChip Assay | 15 diabetic and 34 non-diabetic subjects | 1,649 CpG loci and 853 genes showed differential DNA methylation in T2D islets. |
| ( | Whole-genome bisulfite sequencing | 6 diabetic and 8 non-diabetic subjects | 25,820 DMRs identified in islets from individuals |
DNA methylation status of the key genes related to beta cell homeostasis in human islets in the context of T2D.
| Gene name | Gene function | Methylation status in T2D | References |
|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| Hypermethylation | ( |
|
| Insulin expression, beta cell identity | Hypermethylation | ( |
|
| Insulin secretion | Hypermethylation | ( |
|
| Insulin secretion | Hypermethylation | ( |
|
| Glucose transporter | Hypermethylation | ( |
|
| Beta cell exocytosis | Hypermethylation | ( |
|
| Clock gene, metabolic homeostasis | Hypermethylation | ( |
|
| Glucose-stimulated insulin secretion | Hypermethylation | ( |
|
| Glucose-stimulated insulin secretion | Hypomethylation | ( |
|
| Insulin secretion, T2D risk linkage | Hypomethylation | ( |
|
| Proliferation and insulin secretion | Hypomethylation | ( |
|
| Insulin secretion | Hypomethylation | ( |
|
| Insulin secretion | Hypomethylation | ( |
|
| T2D risk linkage | Hypomethylation | ( |
|
| T2D risk linkage | Hypomethylation | ( |
|
| Survival, ER-stress | Hypomethylation | ( |
|
| Survival | Hypomethylation | ( |
|
| Insulin secretion | Hypomethylation | ( |
|
| Survival. ER-stress | Hypomethylation | ( |
|
| Survival | Hypomethylation | ( |
|
| Apoptosis | Hypomethylation | ( |
|
| Pre-mRNA Splicing | Hypomethylation | ( |
|
| Transcription factor | Hypomethylation | ( |
|
| Transcription factor | Hypomethylation | ( |
|
| Beta cell identity | Hypomethylation | ( |
Blood-based biomarker candidates T1D and T2D.
| Genes | Context | Samples | References |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| T1D | 5 diabetic and 6 non-diabetic subjects | ( |
| 10 T1D progressors and 10 non-progressors | ( | ||
| Multiplex of | T1D | Multiple cohorts with total N=130 T1D (various ages of onset and stages of progression), N=32 autoantibody positive subjects, and N=97 controls. | ( |
|
| T2D and Metabolic Syndrome | 34 metabolic patients (25 with T2D and 9 with both MetS and T2D) and 11 control subjects | ( |
|
| T2D | 93 diabetic and 93 non-diabetic subjects | ( |
|
| T2D | 2,770 participants, non-diabetic at baseline, followed prospectively, to detect progression toward T2D | ( |
| Follow-up of 25 372 participants; 1608 subjects of Indian descent and 7088 subjects of Europeans descent developed T2D | ( | ||
|
| T2D | 2,770 participants, non-diabetic at baseline, followed prospectively, to detect progression toward T2D | ( |
| Follow-up of 25 372 participants; 1608 subjects of Indian descent and 7088 subjects of Europeans descent developed T2D | ( | ||
|
| T2D | Independent prospective cohorts of Caucasian patients (N = 355, N = 167, and N = 645) | ( |
| Follow-up of 25 372 participants; 1608 subjects of Indian descent and 7088 subjects of Europeans descent developed T2D | ( | ||
| T1D | 52 pairs of monozygotic twins, discordant for T1D | ( | |
| 32 EDIC (Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and Complications) Study participants as case group and 31 EDIC Study participants as control group | ( | ||
|
| T2D | 11 pairs of T2D-discordant monozygotic twins | ( |