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Single-housing-induced islet epigenomic changes are related to polymorphisms in diabetic KK mice.

Takao NammoNobuaki FunahashiHaruhide UdagawaJunji KozawaKenta NakanoYukiko ShimizuTadashi OkamuraMiho KawaguchiTakashi UebansoWataru NishimuraMasaki HiramotoIichiro ShimomuraKazuki Yasuda
Published in: Life science alliance (2024)
A lack of social relationships is increasingly recognized as a type 2 diabetes (T2D) risk. To investigate the underlying mechanism, we used male KK mice, an inbred strain with spontaneous diabetes. Given the association between living alone and T2D risk in humans, we divided the non-diabetic mice into singly housed (KK-SH) and group-housed control mice. Around the onset of diabetes in KK-SH mice, we compared H3K27ac ChIP-Seq with RNA-Seq using pancreatic islets derived from each experimental group, revealing a positive correlation between single-housing-induced changes in H3K27ac and gene expression levels. In particular, single-housing-induced H3K27ac decreases revealed a significant association with islet cell functions and GWAS loci for T2D and related diseases, with significant enrichment of binding motifs for transcription factors representative of human diabetes. Although these H3K27ac regions were preferentially localized to a polymorphic genomic background, SNVs and indels did not cause sequence disruption of enriched transcription factor motifs in most of these elements. These results suggest alternative roles of genetic variants in environment-dependent epigenomic changes and provide insights into the complex mode of disease inheritance.
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