NPPA Promoter Hypomethylation Predicts Central Obesity Development: A Prospective Longitudinal Study in Chinese Adults

Author:

Li Jing,Zhu Jinhua,Zhang Qiu,Chen Linan,Ma Shengqi,Lu Ying,Shen Bin,Zhang Rongyan,Zhang Mingzhi,He Yan,Wu Lei,Peng HaoORCID

Abstract

Introduction: Atrial natriuretic peptide plays a potential role in obesity with unclear molecular mechanisms. The objective of this study was to examine the association between its coding gene (natriuretic peptide A [NPPA]) methylation and obesity. Methods: Peripheral blood DNA methylation of NPPA promoter was quantified at baseline by targeted bisulfite sequencing for 2,497 community members (mean aged 53 years, 38% men) in the Gusu cohort. Obesity was repeatedly assessed by body mass index (BMI) and waist circumference (WC) at baseline and follow-up examinations. The cross-sectional, longitudinal, and prospective associations between NPPA promoter methylation and obesity were examined. Results: Of the 9 CpG loci assayed, DNA methylation levels at 6 CpGs were significantly lower in participants with central obesity than those without (all p < 0.05 for permutation test). These CpG methylation levels at baseline were also inversely associated with dynamic changes in BMI or WC during follow-up (all p < 0.05 for permutation test). After an average 4 years of follow-up, hypermethylation at the 6 CpGs (CpG2 located at Chr1:11908348, CpG3 located at Chr1:11908299, CpG4 located at Chr1:11908200, CpG5 located at Chr1:11908182, CpG6 located at Chr1:11908178, and CpG8 located at Chr1:11908165) was significantly associated with a lower risk of incident central obesity (all p < 0.05 for permutation test). Conclusions: Hypomethylation at NPPA promoter was associated with increased future risk of central obesity in Chinese adults. Aberrant DNA methylation of the NPPA gene may participate in the mechanisms of central obesity.

Publisher

S. Karger AG

Subject

Physiology (medical),Health (social science)

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