Paternal sleep deprivation induces metabolic perturbations in male offspring via altered LRP5 DNA methylation of pancreatic islets

Author:

Zeng Yi12,Zhang Zhen2,Liang SiTing2,Chang XinMiao1,Qin RuiJie1,Chen Hong2,Guo LiXin1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Endocrinology, Beijing Hospital, National Center of Gerontology; Institute of Geriatric Medicine Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences P.R. China

2. Department of Endocrinology, Zhujiang Hospital Southern Medical University Guangzhou China

Abstract

AbstractDiabetes and metabolic perturbation are global health challenges. Sleep insufficiency may trigger metabolic dysregulation leading to diabetes. However, the intergenerational transmission of this environmental information is not clearly understood. The research objective was to determine the possible effect of paternal sleep deprivation on the metabolic phenotype of the offspring and to investigate the underlying mechanism of epigenetic inheritance. Male offspring of sleep‐deprived fathers exhibit glucose intolerance, insulin resistance, and impaired insulin secretion. In these SD‐F1 offspring, a reduction in beta cell mass and proliferation of beta cells were observed. Mechanistically, in pancreatic islets of SD‐F1 offspring, we identified alterations in DNA methylation at the promoter region of the LRP5 (LDL receptor related protein 5) gene, a coreceptor of Wnt signaling, resulting in downregulation of downstream effectors cyclin D1, cyclin D2, and Ctnnb1. Restoration of Lrp5 in the pancreas of SD‐F1 male mice could improve impaired glucose tolerance and expression of cyclin D1, cyclin D2, and Ctnnb1. This study might significantly contribute to our understanding of the effects of sleeplessness on health and metabolic disease risk from the perspective of the heritable epigenome.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Endocrinology

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