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Reduced methylation correlates with diabetic nephropathy risk in type 1 diabetes

Diabetic nephropathy (DN) is a polygenic disorder with few risk variants showing robust replication in large-scale genome-wide association studies. To understand the role of DNA methylation, it is important to have the prevailing genomic view to distinguish key sequence elements that influence gene...

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Autores principales: Khurana, Ishant, Kaipananickal, Harikrishnan, Maxwell, Scott, Birkelund, Sørine, Syreeni, Anna, Forsblom, Carol, Okabe, Jun, Ziemann, Mark, Kaspi, Antony, Rafehi, Haloom, Jørgensen, Anne, Al-Hasani, Keith, Thomas, Merlin C., Jiang, Guozhi, Luk, Andrea O.Y., Lee, Heung Man, Huang, Yu, Thewjitcharoen, Yotsapon, Nakasatien, Soontaree, Himathongkam, Thep, Fogarty, Christopher, Njeim, Rachel, Eid, Assaad, Hansen, Tine Willum, Tofte, Nete, Ottesen, Evy C., Ma, Ronald C.W., Chan, Juliana C.N., Cooper, Mark E., Rossing, Peter, Groop, Per-Henrik, El-Osta, Assam
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Clinical Investigation 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9927943/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36633903
http://dx.doi.org/10.1172/JCI160959
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author Khurana, Ishant
Kaipananickal, Harikrishnan
Maxwell, Scott
Birkelund, Sørine
Syreeni, Anna
Forsblom, Carol
Okabe, Jun
Ziemann, Mark
Kaspi, Antony
Rafehi, Haloom
Jørgensen, Anne
Al-Hasani, Keith
Thomas, Merlin C.
Jiang, Guozhi
Luk, Andrea O.Y.
Lee, Heung Man
Huang, Yu
Thewjitcharoen, Yotsapon
Nakasatien, Soontaree
Himathongkam, Thep
Fogarty, Christopher
Njeim, Rachel
Eid, Assaad
Hansen, Tine Willum
Tofte, Nete
Ottesen, Evy C.
Ma, Ronald C.W.
Chan, Juliana C.N.
Cooper, Mark E.
Rossing, Peter
Groop, Per-Henrik
El-Osta, Assam
author_facet Khurana, Ishant
Kaipananickal, Harikrishnan
Maxwell, Scott
Birkelund, Sørine
Syreeni, Anna
Forsblom, Carol
Okabe, Jun
Ziemann, Mark
Kaspi, Antony
Rafehi, Haloom
Jørgensen, Anne
Al-Hasani, Keith
Thomas, Merlin C.
Jiang, Guozhi
Luk, Andrea O.Y.
Lee, Heung Man
Huang, Yu
Thewjitcharoen, Yotsapon
Nakasatien, Soontaree
Himathongkam, Thep
Fogarty, Christopher
Njeim, Rachel
Eid, Assaad
Hansen, Tine Willum
Tofte, Nete
Ottesen, Evy C.
Ma, Ronald C.W.
Chan, Juliana C.N.
Cooper, Mark E.
Rossing, Peter
Groop, Per-Henrik
El-Osta, Assam
author_sort Khurana, Ishant
collection PubMed
description Diabetic nephropathy (DN) is a polygenic disorder with few risk variants showing robust replication in large-scale genome-wide association studies. To understand the role of DNA methylation, it is important to have the prevailing genomic view to distinguish key sequence elements that influence gene expression. This is particularly challenging for DN because genome-wide methylation patterns are poorly defined. While methylation is known to alter gene expression, the importance of this causal relationship is obscured by array-based technologies since coverage outside promoter regions is low. To overcome these challenges, we performed methylation sequencing using leukocytes derived from participants of the Finnish Diabetic Nephropathy (FinnDiane) type 1 diabetes (T1D) study (n = 39) that was subsequently replicated in a larger validation cohort (n = 296). Gene body–related regions made up more than 60% of the methylation differences and emphasized the importance of methylation sequencing. We observed differentially methylated genes associated with DN in 3 independent T1D registries originating from Denmark (n = 445), Hong Kong (n = 107), and Thailand (n = 130). Reduced DNA methylation at CTCF and Pol2B sites was tightly connected with DN pathways that include insulin signaling, lipid metabolism, and fibrosis. To define the pathophysiological significance of these population findings, methylation indices were assessed in human renal cells such as podocytes and proximal convoluted tubule cells. The expression of core genes was associated with reduced methylation, elevated CTCF and Pol2B binding, and the activation of insulin-signaling phosphoproteins in hyperglycemic cells. These experimental observations also closely parallel methylation-mediated regulation in human macrophages and vascular endothelial cells.
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spelling pubmed-99279432023-02-15 Reduced methylation correlates with diabetic nephropathy risk in type 1 diabetes Khurana, Ishant Kaipananickal, Harikrishnan Maxwell, Scott Birkelund, Sørine Syreeni, Anna Forsblom, Carol Okabe, Jun Ziemann, Mark Kaspi, Antony Rafehi, Haloom Jørgensen, Anne Al-Hasani, Keith Thomas, Merlin C. Jiang, Guozhi Luk, Andrea O.Y. Lee, Heung Man Huang, Yu Thewjitcharoen, Yotsapon Nakasatien, Soontaree Himathongkam, Thep Fogarty, Christopher Njeim, Rachel Eid, Assaad Hansen, Tine Willum Tofte, Nete Ottesen, Evy C. Ma, Ronald C.W. Chan, Juliana C.N. Cooper, Mark E. Rossing, Peter Groop, Per-Henrik El-Osta, Assam J Clin Invest Research Article Diabetic nephropathy (DN) is a polygenic disorder with few risk variants showing robust replication in large-scale genome-wide association studies. To understand the role of DNA methylation, it is important to have the prevailing genomic view to distinguish key sequence elements that influence gene expression. This is particularly challenging for DN because genome-wide methylation patterns are poorly defined. While methylation is known to alter gene expression, the importance of this causal relationship is obscured by array-based technologies since coverage outside promoter regions is low. To overcome these challenges, we performed methylation sequencing using leukocytes derived from participants of the Finnish Diabetic Nephropathy (FinnDiane) type 1 diabetes (T1D) study (n = 39) that was subsequently replicated in a larger validation cohort (n = 296). Gene body–related regions made up more than 60% of the methylation differences and emphasized the importance of methylation sequencing. We observed differentially methylated genes associated with DN in 3 independent T1D registries originating from Denmark (n = 445), Hong Kong (n = 107), and Thailand (n = 130). Reduced DNA methylation at CTCF and Pol2B sites was tightly connected with DN pathways that include insulin signaling, lipid metabolism, and fibrosis. To define the pathophysiological significance of these population findings, methylation indices were assessed in human renal cells such as podocytes and proximal convoluted tubule cells. The expression of core genes was associated with reduced methylation, elevated CTCF and Pol2B binding, and the activation of insulin-signaling phosphoproteins in hyperglycemic cells. These experimental observations also closely parallel methylation-mediated regulation in human macrophages and vascular endothelial cells. American Society for Clinical Investigation 2023-02-15 /pmc/articles/PMC9927943/ /pubmed/36633903 http://dx.doi.org/10.1172/JCI160959 Text en © 2023 Khurana et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Khurana, Ishant
Kaipananickal, Harikrishnan
Maxwell, Scott
Birkelund, Sørine
Syreeni, Anna
Forsblom, Carol
Okabe, Jun
Ziemann, Mark
Kaspi, Antony
Rafehi, Haloom
Jørgensen, Anne
Al-Hasani, Keith
Thomas, Merlin C.
Jiang, Guozhi
Luk, Andrea O.Y.
Lee, Heung Man
Huang, Yu
Thewjitcharoen, Yotsapon
Nakasatien, Soontaree
Himathongkam, Thep
Fogarty, Christopher
Njeim, Rachel
Eid, Assaad
Hansen, Tine Willum
Tofte, Nete
Ottesen, Evy C.
Ma, Ronald C.W.
Chan, Juliana C.N.
Cooper, Mark E.
Rossing, Peter
Groop, Per-Henrik
El-Osta, Assam
Reduced methylation correlates with diabetic nephropathy risk in type 1 diabetes
title Reduced methylation correlates with diabetic nephropathy risk in type 1 diabetes
title_full Reduced methylation correlates with diabetic nephropathy risk in type 1 diabetes
title_fullStr Reduced methylation correlates with diabetic nephropathy risk in type 1 diabetes
title_full_unstemmed Reduced methylation correlates with diabetic nephropathy risk in type 1 diabetes
title_short Reduced methylation correlates with diabetic nephropathy risk in type 1 diabetes
title_sort reduced methylation correlates with diabetic nephropathy risk in type 1 diabetes
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9927943/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36633903
http://dx.doi.org/10.1172/JCI160959
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