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Epigenome-Wide Association Study of Incident Type 2 Diabetes in a British Population: EPIC-Norfolk Study

Title: Epigenome-Wide Association Study of Incident Type 2 Diabetes in a British Population: EPIC-Norfolk Study
Authors: Cardona, A; Day, FR; Perry, JRB; Loh, M; Chu, AY; Lehne, B; Paul, DS; Lotta, LA; Stewart, ID; Kerrison, ND; Scott, RA; Khaw, KT; Forouhi, NG; Langenberg, C; Liu, C; Mendelson, MM; Levy, D; Beck, S; Leslie, RD; Dupuis, J; incl. Pihlajamäki, J
Contributors: School of Medicine / Clinical Nutrition
Publisher Information: American Diabetes Association
Publication Year: 2020
Collection: University of Eastern Finland: UEF Electronic Publications
Description: Epigenetic changes may contribute substantially to risks of diseases of aging. Previous studies reported seven methylation variable positions (MVPs) robustly associated with incident type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). However, their causal roles in T2DM are unclear. In an incident T2DM case-cohort study nested within the population-based European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC)-Norfolk cohort, we used whole blood DNA collected at baseline, up to 11 years before T2DM onset, to investigate the role of methylation in the etiology of T2DM. We identified 15 novel MVPs with robust associations with incident T2DM and robustly confirmed three MVPs identified previously (near to TXNIP, ABCG1, and SREBF1). All 18 MVPs showed directionally consistent associations with incident and prevalent T2DM in independent studies. Further conditional analyses suggested that the identified epigenetic signals appear related to T2DM via glucose and obesity-related pathways acting before the collection of baseline samples. We integrated genome-wide genetic data to identify methylation-associated quantitative trait loci robustly associated with 16 of the 18 MVPs and found one MVP, cg00574958 at CPT1A, with a possible direct causal role in T2DM. None of the implicated genes were previously highlighted by genetic association studies, suggesting that DNA methylation studies may reveal novel biological mechanisms involved in tissue responses to glycemia. ; final draft ; peerReviewed
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
File Description: 2315-2326
Language: unknown
ISSN: 0012-1797
Relation: Diabetes; http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/db18-0290; info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/FP7-HEALTH/279143/EU/Identification of epigenetic markers underlying increased risk of T2D in South Asians/EPI-MIGRANT; info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/H2020-EU.3.1.3./643774/EU/Family-based intervention to improve healthy lifestyle and prevent Type 2 Diabetes amongst South Asians with central obesity and prediabetes/iHealth-T2D; 12; 68; https://erepo.uef.fi/handle/123456789/7933
Availability: https://erepo.uef.fi/handle/123456789/7933
Rights: In copyright 1.0 ; openAccess ; © American Diabetes Association ; https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC/1.0/
Accession Number: edsbas.78C4E8A9
Database: BASE