Placental epigenetic marks related to gestational weight gain reveal potential genes associated with offspring obesity parameters

Author:

Gómez‐Vilarrubla Ariadna1ORCID,Mas‐Parés Berta2,Carreras‐Badosa Gemma2,Xargay‐Torrent Sílvia2,Prats‐Puig Anna34,Bonmatí‐Santané Alexandra5,de Zegher Francis6,Ibañez Lourdes78,López‐Bermejo Abel2910ORCID,Bassols Judit1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Maternal‐Fetal Metabolic Research Group Institute of Biomedical Research of Girona Salt Spain

2. Pediatric Endocrinology Research Group Institute of Biomedical Research of Girona Salt Spain

3. University School of Health and Sport University of Girona Girona Spain

4. Research Group of Clinical Anatomy, Embryology and Neuroscience, Department of Medical Sciences University of Girona Girona Spain

5. Department of Gynecology Dr Josep Trueta Hospital Girona Spain

6. Department of Development and Regeneration University of Leuven Leuven Belgium

7. Endocrinology, Pediatric Research Institute, Sant Joan de Déu Children's Hospital Barcelona Spain

8. CIBERDEM (Spanish Biomedical Research Centre in Diabetes and Associated Metabolic Disorders), Instituto de Salud Carlos III Madrid Spain

9. Department of Pediatrics Dr Josep Trueta Hospital Girona Spain

10. Department of Medical Sciences University of Girona Girona Spain

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveOffspring exposed to gestational obesity have an increased risk for chronic diseases. Increasing evidence suggests that epigenetics may play a mechanistic role in metabolic programming. This study aimed to identify placental DNA methylation marks associated with gestational weight gain (GWG) and to study their association with offspring obesity parameters at school age.MethodsA global methylation array was performed in 24 placentas from mothers with different degrees of GWG (screening sample). The methylation percentage of four cytosine‐guanine (CpG) sites and the relative expression of the respective annotated genes were studied in 90 additional placentas (validation sample). Associations of these epigenetic marks with clinical parameters in the offspring at 6 years of age were examined.ResultsThe screening analysis identified 104 CpG sites (97 genes) associated with GWG. The validation analysis of four selected CpG sites (annotating for FRAT1, SNX5, and KCNK3 genes) showed that the upregulation of SNX5 methylation, the downregulation of FRAT1 methylation, and KCNK3 underexpression associated with an adverse metabolic phenotype in children of women with increased GWG.ConclusionsThese results suggest that placental regulation of FRAT1, SNX5, and KCNK3 relates to obesity parameters in offspring exposed to excessive GWG and thereby could condition the risk for future metabolic disorders.image

Funder

European Regional Development Fund

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nutrition and Dietetics,Endocrinology,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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