Early postnatal overnutrition accelerates aging-associated epigenetic drift in pancreatic islets.

Early postnatal overnutrition accelerates aging-associated epigenetic drift in pancreatic islets.

Li, Ge;Petkova, Tihomira D;Laritsky, Eleonora;Kessler, Noah;Baker, Maria S;Zhu, Shaoyu;Waterland, Robert A;
environmental epigenetics 2019 Vol. 5 pp. dvz015
327
li2019earlyenvironmental

Abstract

Pancreatic islets of type 2 diabetes patients have altered DNA methylation, contributing to islet dysfunction and the onset of type 2 diabetes. The cause of these epigenetic alterations is largely unknown. We set out to test whether (i) islet DNA methylation would change with aging and (ii) early postnatal overnutrition would persistently alter DNA methylation. We performed genome-scale DNA methylation profiling in islets from postnatally over-nourished (suckled in a small litter) and control male mice at both postnatal day 21 and postnatal day 180. DNA methylation differences were validated using quantitative bisulfite pyrosequencing, and associations with expression were assessed by RT-PCR. We discovered that genomic regions that are hypermethylated in exocrine relative to endocrine pancreas tend to gain methylation in islets during aging ( = 0.33,  < 0.0001). These methylation differences were inversely correlated with mRNA expression of genes relevant to β cell function [including (Ras-related protein Rab-3B), (voltage-dependent L-type calcium channel subunit 3), (sarcoplasmic/endoplasmic reticulum calcium ATPase 3) and (insulin 2)]. Relative to control, small litter islets showed DNA methylation differences directly after weaning and in adulthood, but few of these were present at both ages. Surprisingly, we found substantial overlap of methylated loci caused by aging and small litter feeding, suggesting that the age-associated gain of DNA methylation happened much earlier in small litter islets than control islets. Our results provide the novel insights that aging-associated DNA methylation increases reflect an epigenetic drift toward the exocrine pancreas epigenome, and that early postnatal overnutrition may accelerate this process.

Citation

ID: 53003
Ref Key: li2019earlyenvironmental
Use this key to autocite in SciMatic or Thesis Manager

References

Blockchain Verification

Account:
NFT Contract Address:
0x95644003c57E6F55A65596E3D9Eac6813e3566dA
Article ID:
53003
Unique Identifier:
10.1093/eep/dvz015
Network:
Scimatic Chain (ID: 481)
Loading...
Blockchain Readiness Checklist
Authors
Abstract
Journal Name
Year
Title
5/5
Creates 1,000,000 NFT tokens for this article
Token Features:
  • ERC-1155 Standard NFT
  • 1 Million Supply per Article
  • Transferable via MetaMask
  • Permanent Blockchain Record
Blockchain QR Code
Scan with Saymatik Web3.0 Wallet

Saymatik Web3.0 Wallet