Interindividual variation in DNA methylation at a putative POMC metastable epiallele is associated with obesity

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2016-09Language
enType
Journal ArticleReview status
Peer ReviewISI journal
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Kühnen, P., Handke, D., Waterland, R.A., Hennig, B.J., Silver, M., Fulford, A.J., Dominguez-Salas, P., Moore, S.E., Prentice, A.M., Spranger, J., Hinney, A., Hebebrand, J., Heppner, F.L., Walzer, L., Grötzinger, C., Gromoll, J., Wiegand, S., Grüters, A. and Krude, H. 2016. Interindividual variation in DNA methylation at a putative POMC metastable epiallele is associated with obesity. Cell Metabolism 24(3): 502–509.
Permanent link to cite or share this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10568/77018
Abstract/Description
The estimated heritability of human BMI is close to 75%, but identified genetic variants explain only a small fraction of interindividual body-weight variation. Inherited epigenetic variants identified in mouse models named "metastable epialleles" could in principle explain this "missing heritability." We provide evidence that methylation in a variably methylated region (VMR) in the pro-opiomelanocortin gene (POMC), particularly in postmortem human laser-microdissected melanocyte-stimulating hormone (MSH)-positive neurons, is strongly associated with individual BMI. Using cohorts from different ethnic backgrounds, including a Gambian cohort, we found evidence suggesting that methylation of the POMC VMR is established in the early embryo and that offspring methylation correlates with the paternal somatic methylation pattern. Furthermore, it is associated with levels of maternal one-carbon metabolites at conception and stable during postnatal life. Together, these data suggest that the POMC VMR may be a human metastable epiallele that influences body-weight regulation.
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Organizations Affiliated to the Authors
Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin; Baylor College of Medicine; Medical Research Council; London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine; Royal Veterinary College, United Kingdom; International Livestock Research Institute; Max-Delbrück Centre; University of Duisburg-Essen; NeuroCure, Berlin; Universität MünsterCollections
- CRP A4NH outputs [1502]
- ILRI articles in journals [6643]
- ILRI Food Safety and Zoonoses program outputs [751]
