Hyperglycemia Altered DNA Methylation Status and Impaired Pancreatic Differentiation from Embryonic Stem Cells.
Andy Chun Hang ChenWen HuangSze Wan FongChris ChanKai Chuen LeeWilliam Shu Biu YeungYin Lau LeePublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2021)
The prevalence of type 2 diabetes (T2D) is rapidly increasing across the globe. Fetal exposure to maternal diabetes was correlated with higher prevalence of impaired glucose tolerance and T2D later in life. Previous studies showed aberrant DNA methylation patterns in pancreas of T2D patients. However, the underlying mechanisms remained largely unknown. We utilized human embryonic stem cells (hESC) as the in vitro model for studying the effects of hyperglycemia on DNA methylome and early pancreatic differentiation. Culture in hyperglycemic conditions disturbed the pancreatic lineage potential of hESC, leading to the downregulation of expression of pancreatic markers PDX1, NKX6-1 and NKX6-2 after in vitro differentiation. Genome-wide DNA methylome profiling revealed over 2000 differentially methylated CpG sites in hESC cultured in hyperglycemic condition when compared with those in control glucose condition. Gene ontology analysis also revealed that the hypermethylated genes were enriched in cell fate commitment. Among them, NKX6-2 was validated and its hypermethylation status was maintained upon differentiation into pancreatic progenitor cells. We also established mouse ESC lines at both physiological glucose level (PG-mESC) and conventional hyperglycemia glucose level (HG-mESC). Concordantly, DNA methylome analysis revealed the enrichment of hypermethylated genes related to cell differentiation in HG-mESC, including Nkx6-1. Our results suggested that hyperglycemia dysregulated the epigenome at early fetal development, possibly leading to impaired pancreatic development.
Keyphrases
- dna methylation
- genome wide
- embryonic stem cells
- type diabetes
- single cell
- cell fate
- circulating tumor
- endothelial cells
- copy number
- gene expression
- cardiovascular disease
- end stage renal disease
- blood glucose
- risk factors
- single molecule
- cell free
- ejection fraction
- poor prognosis
- chronic kidney disease
- adipose tissue
- peritoneal dialysis
- body mass index
- genome wide identification
- pregnant women
- fluorescent probe
- weight loss
- patient reported outcomes
- data analysis
- skeletal muscle
- living cells