Longitudinal analysis of epigenome-wide DNA methylation reveals novel loci associated with BMI change in East Asians

Author:

Li Wenran,Xia Mingfeng,Zeng Hailuan,Lin Huandong,Teschendorff Andrew E.,Gao XinORCID,Wang SijiaORCID

Abstract

Abstract Background Obesity is a global public health concern linked to chronic diseases such as cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes (T2D). Emerging evidence suggests that epigenetic modifications, particularly DNA methylation, may contribute to obesity. However, the molecular mechanism underlying the longitudinal change of BMI has not been well-explored, especially in East Asian populations. Methods This study performed a longitudinal epigenome-wide association analysis of DNA methylation to uncover novel loci associated with BMI change in 533 individuals across two Chinese cohorts with repeated DNA methylation and BMI measurements over four years. Results We identified three novel CpG sites (cg14671384, cg25540824, and cg10848724) significantly associated with BMI change. Two of the identified CpG sites were located in regions previously associated with body shape and basal metabolic rate. Annotation of the top 20 BMI change-associated CpGs revealed strong connections to obesity and T2D. Notably, these CpGs exhibited active regulatory roles and located in genes with high expression in the liver and digestive tract, suggesting a potential regulatory pathway from genome to phenotypes of energy metabolism and absorption via DNA methylation. Cross-sectional and longitudinal EWAS comparisons indicated different mechanisms between CpGs related to BMI and BMI change. Conclusion This study enhances our understanding of the epigenetic dynamics underlying BMI change and emphasizes the value of longitudinal analyses in deciphering the complex interplay between epigenetics and obesity.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

China Postdoctoral Science Foundation

Chinese Academy of Sciences Young Team Program for Stable Support of Basic Research

Program of Shanghai Academic Research Leader

Shanghai Municipal Science and Technology Major Project

National Key Research and Development Program of China

Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences

Shanghai Science and Technology Commission Excellent Academic Leaders Program

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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