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3D genomic features across >50 diverse cell types reveal insights into the genomic architecture of childhood obesity.

Authors :
Trang KB
Pahl MC
Pippin JA
Su C
Littleton SH
Sharma P
Kulkarni NN
Ghanem LR
Terry NA
O'Brien JM
Wagley Y
Hankenson KD
Jermusyk A
Hoskins JW
Amundadottir LT
Xu M
Brown KM
Anderson SA
Yang W
Titchenell PM
Seale P
Cook L
Levings MK
Zemel BS
Chesi A
Wells AD
Grant SFA
Source :
MedRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences [medRxiv] 2024 Aug 13. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Aug 13.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The prevalence of childhood obesity is increasing worldwide, along with the associated common comorbidities of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease in later life. Motivated by evidence for a strong genetic component, our prior genome-wide association study (GWAS) efforts for childhood obesity revealed 19 independent signals for the trait; however, the mechanism of action of these loci remains to be elucidated. To molecularly characterize these childhood obesity loci we sought to determine the underlying causal variants and the corresponding effector genes within diverse cellular contexts. Integrating childhood obesity GWAS summary statistics with our existing 3D genomic datasets for 57 human cell types, consisting of high-resolution promoter-focused Capture-C/Hi-C, ATAC-seq, and RNA-seq, we applied stratified LD score regression and calculated the proportion of genome-wide SNP heritability attributable to cell type-specific features, revealing pancreatic alpha cell enrichment as the most statistically significant. Subsequent chromatin contact-based fine-mapping was carried out for genome-wide significant childhood obesity loci and their linkage disequilibrium proxies to implicate effector genes, yielded the most abundant number of candidate variants and target genes at the BDNF , ADCY3 , TMEM18 and FTO loci in skeletal muscle myotubes and the pancreatic beta-cell line, EndoC-BH1. One novel implicated effector gene, ALKAL2 - an inflammation-responsive gene in nerve nociceptors - was observed at the key TMEM18 locus across multiple immune cell types. Interestingly, this observation was also supported through colocalization analysis using expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) derived from the Genotype-Tissue Expression (GTEx) dataset, supporting an inflammatory and neurologic component to the pathogenesis of childhood obesity. Our comprehensive appraisal of 3D genomic datasets generated in a myriad of different cell types provides genomic insights into pediatric obesity pathogenesis.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
MedRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37693606
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.08.30.23294092