Abstract
DNA methylation has a great potential for understanding the aetiology of common complex traits such as Type 2 diabetes (T2D). Here we perform genome-wide methylated DNA immunoprecipitation sequencing (MeDIP-seq) in whole-blood-derived DNA from 27 monozygotic twin pairs and follow up results with replication and integrated omics analyses. We identify predominately hypermethylated T2D-related differentially methylated regions (DMRs) and replicate the top signals in 42 unrelated T2D cases and 221 controls. The strongest signal is in the promoter of the MALT1 gene, involved in insulin and glycaemic pathways, and related to taurocholate levels in blood. Integrating the DNA methylome findings with T2D GWAS meta-analysis results reveals a strong enrichment for DMRs in T2D-susceptibility loci. We also detect signals specific to T2D-discordant twins in the GPR61 and PRKCB genes. These replicated T2D associations reflect both likely causal and consequential pathways of the disease. The analysis indicates how an integrated genomics and epigenomics approach, utilizing an MZ twin design, can provide pathogenic insights as well as potential drug targets and biomarkers for T2D and other complex traits.
Similar content being viewed by others
Introduction
Type 2 diabetes (T2D) is a highly heterogeneous disease caused via a combination of genetic susceptibility and environmental exposures. Recent genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified at least 65 T2D loci, which explain only ~6% of disease susceptibility variance1. Part of the variance in T2D could also be explained by epigenetic effects, such as differences in DNA methylation2,3. Finding disease-associated DNA methylation variation will provide insight into novel molecular disease mechanisms, may help to predict disease status and potentially generate novel treatment methods. The identification of these genome-wide differentially methylated regions (DMRs) in association with complex phenotypes through epigenome wide association studies3,4, is substantially improved by a powerful disease-discordant identical twin model5. Previous studies in psychiatric disease and psoriasis using this twin model with Illumina HumanMethylation27K arrays have provided suggestive, but unreplicated evidence of associations6,7, and more recent analyses with the Illumina HumanMethylation450k array in unrelated subjects have identified significant effects in autoimmune disease, within the HLA region8.
In this study, we use high-throughput methylation immunoprecipitation sequencing (methylated DNA immunoprecipitation sequencing, MeDIP-seq) to obtain whole-blood DNA methylation profiles. MeDIP-seq enables a cost-effective genome-wide DNA methylome characterization and provides access into moderately dense CpG regions of the genome, such as CpG island ‘shores’ (refs 9, 10) and repetitive elements with potential regulatory effects11. We compare genome-wide DNA methylation profiles in T2D to identify DMRs in the total set of 27 discordant and concordant pairs of monozygotic (MZ) adult twins using a mixed effect model. We follow these up with analysis restricted to the 17 T2D-discordant MZ twins to identify genetically independent DMRs (giDMRs) with a paired model. Importantly, we replicate our results in an independent sample of 263 unrelated cases (42) and controls (221).
Results
DNA methylome analysis in MZ twins
MeDIP-seq data were generated at ~30 million paired-end reads of length 50 bp per individual, and mapped to the human genome using Novoalign12. We quantified relative levels of DNA methylation in overlapping bins of size 500 bp (sliding window of 250 bp) using MEDIPS13. We assessed evidence of DMRs in T2D (T2D-DMRs) in the entire sample of 27 MZ twin pairs, which consisted of 17 T2D discordant, 3 T2D concordant and 7 healthy control concordant twin pairs (Supplementary Data 1). In this exploratory stage, we identified one disease-associated DMR at a FDR level of 5%, 31 DMRs at 10% and 4,545 DMRs at 25% using a linear mixed effects model. Taking the FDR 25% cutoff as our suggestive T2D-DMR set, approximately two-thirds of the observed suggestive T2D-DMRs are hypermethylated in cases (Fig. 1). Using annotations to 53,631 autosomal Ensembl genes (19,816 protein coding, 22,013 non-coding, 11,802 pseudogenes) 1,535 suggestive T2D-DMRs (33.7%) are located in the extended promoter region (within 20 kb upstream of the gene including potential distal promoter and nearby regulatory elements14) and 2,494 (54.8%) are found to reside within the gene body. In total, 3,597 genes are annotated to contain at least one suggestive T2D-DMR within the gene body or promoter region (Supplementary Data 2). Exactly 0.8% of the T2D-DMRs are located within 100 bp of the transcription start site (TSS), which is 34% more than that expected by chance (comparing observed data to randomly permuted TSS locations within chromosome for 20 permutations, P<0.05). We also assess the overlap between the suggestive T2D-DMRs with the most variable DNA methylome regions (totalling 492 Mb) detected by whole-genome bisulfite sequencing from 42 data sets across 30 human cell and tissue types defined by Ziller et al.15 Altogether, 867 T2D-DMRs (19%) co-localize with DNA methylation variation loci, which translates to a 1.1-fold enrichment (Fisher’s test P=0.003).
To further validate our MeDIP-seq methylome analysis, we also assess the highly-replicated DNA methylation association with smoking status in the genes ALPPL2 (2q37.1 region), AHRR and F2RL3 within our data set. We selected previously identified smoking-associated 450k CpG sites in these genes, and extracted MeDIP-seq bins that overlap the smoking-associated CpG site. We find significant associations between smoking status and methylation levels at CpG sites in the ALPPL2 and AHRR genes (Bonferroni corrected P<0.05) and borderline uncorrected significance for the F2RL3 gene. These findings are reassuringly consistent with recent discoveries, despite the small numbers of smokers in our sample (11 out of 54) and the use of different technologies.
T2D-DMRs validation and replication
To validate our MeDIP-seq results with another platform, we targeted the top 24 DMRs from the more stringent FDR 10% set and 7 other suggestive T2D-DMRs in the same set of samples using the Illumina HumanMethylation450K Bead Chip (Supplementary Data 3). Of these 31 DMRs, 20 DMRs have representative 450k probes for the validation test. Of these 20 DMRs, 12 DMRs are validated with the same direction of effect at nominal significance (linear mixed effect model P<0.05), and a further 4 DMRs show the same direction of effect, but do not reach nominal significance.
We then attempted replication of all 4,545 suggestive T2D-DMRs in an independent sample of 42 unrelated T2D cases and 221 UK controls, matched for age, body mass index (BMI) and sex with single-end MeDIP-sequencing profiles. Of the 4,545 DMRs, 3,939 (87%) show the same direction of association and 1,355 (30%) replicate with the same direction of association and with nominal significance (linear regression P<0.05).
MALT1 methylation associates with T2D
The top ranked T2D-DMR (chr18:56336501–56337000, P=9.95 × 10−10, β=0.08, FDR 5%; replication P=2 × 10−3) overlaps another T2D-DMR (chr18:56336751–56337250, P=6 × 10−5, FDR 23%, β=0.1, replication P=5 × 10−4, Fig. 2). These DMRs are located in a 2kb region upstream of the TSS within the 5′ promoter (as defined by ChromHMM analyses in GM12878 (ref. 16)) of the MALT1 gene (mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue lymphoma translocation protein 1). MALT1 is a signalling protein with a key role in antigen receptor-mediated lymphocyte activation through the nuclear factor-κB pathway, important in the development and function of B and T cells17, as well as energy and insulin pathways18. We explored genetic contributions to MALT1 regulation, but found no evidence that genetic variants are associated with either MALT1 methylation (in the replication sample) or expression in adipose, lymphoblastoid cell lines , skin tissue (using the MuTHER gene expression data set from the same twin population19). Furthermore, whole-blood DNA methylation in MALT1 did not associate with its gene expression in the three tested tissues, although the gene has previously been shown to be expressed in whole blood20.
To explore a potential functional influence of the MALT1 DMR on T2D, we correlated the top DMR’s (chr18: 56336501–56337000) methylation patterns with 503 fasting blood metabolites profiled by mass spectrometry21. Seven metabolites consistently associate with MALT1 methylation in both the discovery and replication samples (meta-analysis Bonferroni correction P<0.05; Supplementary Data 4). Among these is taurocholate, which has been associated with increasing L cell and insulin secretion as well as a decrease in blood glucose and food intake in obese type 2 diabetic volunteers22.
Enrichment in T2D GWAS loci and imprinted genes
We next integrated our DMR findings with GWAS meta-analysis results1 and found significant overlap of T2D-DMRs and GWAS loci using three approaches. First, we compare the most significant single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) within each of the 65 T2D GWAS loci (50 kb either side of the SNP) with our 4,545 suggestive T2D-DMRs (FDR 25%), and observe a significant overlap of genomic regions (Fisher’s test P=0.0004). Second, we compare the 65 genes closest to the published GWAS T2D loci with our 3,597 T2D-DMR genes, and find highly significant overlap of genes (Fisher’s test P=0.004). Third, the ranking of DMR p values within the GWAS T2D loci in the genome is significantly higher than that for sets of randomly sampled Ensembl genes that had MeDIP-seq coverage (10,000 draws Wilcoxon ranking test P<0.0001; Supplementary Data 5). In total, 12 of the 65 reported T2D GWAS loci are significantly differentially methylated (FDR 25%), and these include well-documented T2D loci such as those near IGF2BP2 (Insulin-like growth factor 2 mRNA-binding protein 2) and THADA (thyroid adenoma-associated gene). The DNA methylation levels at these 12 T2D GWAS loci clustered the individuals in our study into two clear case–control groups (Supplementary Fig.1a,b). As a control, and a check for bias and specificity, we found no enrichment of GWAS genes related to other diseases and phenotypes, such as psoriasis, Crohn's disease and hair colour (Supplementary Data 6). The significant overlap between T2D-DMR genes and T2D GWAS loci suggests that DNA methylation or related chromatin structure alterations of many T2D-DMR genes could be causally related to T2D status and in theory potentially reversible, which therapeutically could have major clinical promise.
We further cross referenced our top 3,597 genes nearest to the 4,545 suggestive T2D-DMRs (FDR=25%) with well-established imprinted loci from The Genomic Imprinting Website23. We examined imprinting regions because: (1) previously published studies have suggested a role for parent-of-origin effects in T2D24,25; (2) obesity, being a risk factor for T2D, is a common phenotype in syndromic imprinting disorders, and has therefore implicated aberrant imprinting in common obesity susceptibility; (3) the developmental hypotheses that have been proposed in these diseases25,26,27,28. T2D-DMRs overlap with 191 potentially imprinted genes with a threefold enrichment (Fisher’s test P=0.001), and furthermore show a twofold enrichment with 83 confirmed imprinted genes (Fisher’s test P=0.1). This includes genes previously linked to diabetes and obesity, for example PRDM16 (refs 29, 30). We also find a higher ranking of DMR p values for the imprinted loci than for randomly sampled genes that have MeDIP-seq mapping coverage (P=8 × 10−4; Supplementary Data 7).
DMRs associate with genetic variants
To further investigate the genetic contribution to the T2D-DMRs, we attempted to identify methylation quantitative trait loci (mQTL), and thus associate methylation levels with genotype variation. For cis mQTL, we tested common SNPs within 50 kb of the T2D-DMRs and found an enrichment for genetic effects, suggesting that a number of the disease DMRs have a genetic contribution. Altogether, 397 out of the 4,545 T2D-DMRs possess a cis mQTL (linear regression P=8.6 × 10−7, FDR=5%). For example, SNP rs10495903 associates with a DMR 8 kb from the 5′ end of THADA (chr2:43831251–43831750, P=6.7 × 10−10, β=−11.4) and SNP rs2086675 associates with an intragenic ANKRD55 (Ankyrin Repeat Domain 55) DMR (chr5:55464001–55464500; linear regression P=6.4 × 10−7, β=7.0). We further assessed genetic trans associations for 757 replicated T2D-DMRs (replication linear regression P<0.01) in the replication samples. Of these 757 T2D-DMRs, 29 (3.8%) have trans mQTL (linear regression P=2.4 × 10−8, FDR=5%), but none show significant evidence that methylation is the mediator of the genetic effect on disease using the causal inference test31.
Discovery of giDMRs
Using our monozygotic discordant twin pair model, we are also able to search for epigenetic differences within genetically identical twins, and we name these regions ‘genetically independent DMRs (giDMRs). Unlike T2D-DMRs identified from the linear model, which reflect both genetic and environmental effects on T2D, giDMRs likely represent pure environmental effects, stochastic mechanisms or consequences of the disease itself. We find 2 (t-test P=3 × 10−7, FDR=10%) and 914 (t-test P=1 × 10−4, FDR=25%) T2D giDMRs within the 17 discordant MZ twin pairs, which overlap 890 genes in total (including regions up to 20 kb upstream of the gene, Supplementary Data 8,9). The giDMR genes are significantly enriched in the Wnt signalling pathway, insulin signalling pathway and synaptic vesicle cycle (FDR=0.001, 0.003 and 0.004, respectively Supplementary Data 10). We tested the T2D-methylation association of the top 20 gene-related giDMRs in the replication data set of 263 unrelated cases and controls, and find that three regions validate with same direction of effect at nominal significance (linear regression P<0.05), and a further eight show the same direction of change. We also observe that three of the top four DMRs showed the same trend of association in skeletal muscle in another unrelated cohort of 30 cases and controls profiled with the Illumina 450k array. Altogether, 175 giDMRs (which mapped to 109 genes) overlap the 4,545 FDR 25% T2D-DMRs from the linear mixed model analyses. The MALT1 DMRs do not pass the FDR 25% giDMR threshold, but show modest giDMR effects consistent with the direction of T2D-DMR association in the primary linear model, suggesting that they were primarily independent of genetic influences (chr18:56336501–56337000, P=0.001). The top giDMR, which is also identified in the primary linear model analyses (discovery P=3.78 × 10−6 and replication P=0.01), is in the promoter of the GPR61 (G-protein coupled receptor 61) gene. Knockout studies of GPR61 in mice exhibit hyperphagia-induced obesity and higher plasma insulin levels32. The sixth ranked giDMR is in the PRKCB (protein kinase C, β) gene region, and another top giDMR is in the PRKCB TSS, and both are hypo-methylated in T2D cases. Increasing PRKCB levels caused by hyperglycaemia, are involved in insulin resistance33 and elevated PRKCB expression appears in the vasculature of T2D cases34.
Whole-blood cell subtype analysis
The ideal tissue to study directly T2D pathophysiology would be the pancreatic β-cells; however, collection of this biological material is invasive and not feasible on a large scale. Peripheral blood is the best accessible alternative tissue that reflects multiple metabolic pathways. Early developmental epigenetic changes may be present in multiple tissues and additionally the T2D-associated metabolic syndrome is commonly associated with inflammatory processes35,36,37, which would be reflected in blood. Furthermore there is high potential clinical utility for any identified blood-derived epigenetic disease markers.
White blood cell (WBC) subtype proportions have been previously reported to associate with T2D38,39 and could possibly confound our associations. We find no significant association between estimated counts of lymphocytes, neutrophils, eosinophils and total blood cell counts with DNA methylation levels at the 4,545 (FDR 25%) T2D-DMRs. Only 2 out of the 4,545 DMRs are weakly associated with monocyte cell counts (chr21:34816251–34816750 linear regression P=0.01 and chr22:17742501–17743000 linear regression P=0.02). This suggests that differential blood cell types do not significantly confound the major T2D-methylation changes observed in our twin analysis.
Medication use
To explore possible effects of T2D medication on our findings, we first tested for association between methylation level and medication at time of blood sampling. We find that 2 (0.04%) of 4,545 T2D-DMR are associated with medication (FDR<0.05). We then divided cases into those on and off medication at the time of blood sampling as a covariate. After adjusting for medication, both of these T2D-DMRs are still nominally associated with T2D status (linear regression P=0.02), suggesting that medication is not a major confounder.
Conclusion
We have identified potential T2D-related changes in a genome-wide analysis of the whole-blood DNA methylome. These are located predominantly around the TSS, but also show hypermethylation within gene regions. We find DMRs in the promoters of genes, such as MALT1 and GPR61, where epigenetic modifications likely act as markers of the disease process, and where metabolomics data may highlight the chemical sequelae. Although our MZ twin design can increase power to detect unbiased biological changes, the relatively small effect sizes require further replication of the results in an external independent cohort. Our study shows the clear scientific and clinical potential of integrating epigenomics with other omics data for common complex diseases. This integrated approach has enabled us to characterize the epigenome, and identify key DNA methylation changes occurring in both T2D-susceptibility genes as well as genes altered by the disease progression itself.
Methods
Twins
All participants in the study provided written informed consent in accordance with the St Thomas’ Hospital local ethics research committee. Altogether, 27 pairs of MZ twins (including 17 pairs of T2D-discordant twins, 3 pairs of T2D-concordant twin and 7 pairs of healthy concordant twin, Supplementary Data 1) were selected in the discovery phase from the TwinsUK cohort40. Each participant’s information was collected by interview and questionnaire. Weight and height were taken on the day of visit and were used to calculate BMI. The zyogsity is determined by standard zygosity questionnaire and confirmed by genotyping (60%). We defined T2D status by the serum fasting glucose level test (≥7 mmol l−1) and/or self-report of T2D in the questionnaire data. The healthy twin in discordant twins was required to have a serum fasting glucose level test of ≤5 mmol l−1. The replication sample set was also selected from the TwinsUK cohort and comprised 42 unrelated T2D cases and 221 controls matched for age, BMI and sex.
Whole blood was collected at the interview and stored at −80 °C in EDTA tubes. DNA was extracted using the Nucleon Genomic DNA Extraction Kit BACC3 and stored at −20 °C in TE Buffer. We also obtained WBC subtype counts. WBC counts were derived from fluorescence activated cell sorting of peripheral blood. WBC subtype specific cell counts were calculated by multiplying the proportion of the WBC count of each cell type within the total WBC count (estimated in thousands of cells per ml), for four cell types in our sample set: neutrophils, eosinophils, monocytes and lymphocytes.
MeDIP sequencing (MeDIP-seq)
All sample preparations and MeDIP sequencing were performed by the BGI-Shenzhen, Shenzhen, China. Extracted DNA was fragmented using a Covaris sonication system and sequencing libraries were prepared from 5-μg fragmented genomic DNA. End repair, <A > base addition and adaptor ligation steps were performed using Illumina’s Paired-End DNA Sample Prep kit. Adaptor-ligated DNA was immunoprecipitated by anti-5mC using a commercial antibody (Diagenode) and MeDIP products were validated by quantitative PCR. MeDIP DNA was purified with ZYMO DNA Clean & Concentrator-5 columns and amplified using adaptor-mediated PCR. DNA fragments between 200 and 500 bp in size were gel-excised, and the amplification quality and quantity were evaluated by Agilent BioAnalyzer analysis. The libraries were subjected to highly parallel 50-bp paired-end sequencing on the Illumina GAII platform. All sequencing data passed initial quality checks for base composition (no exclusions) using FASTQC (v0.10.0; ref. 41). For each individual, ~60 million reads were generated and mapped onto hg19 using Novoalign V2.07.11 (ref. 42). After removing duplicates, we filtered data using quality score Q10, paired-end read criteria and fragment insert-size distribution checks, which resulted in ~30 million unique reads confidently mapped onto the human genome. We quantified methylation levels using MEDIPs13 producing absolute methylation signals (AMS) and the mean relative methylation score (RPM) in each 500-bp bin (overlap of 250 bp) across the genome and these windows were used for the DMR analyses. The replication samples were profiled following the same procedure as the discovery set, except they were sequenced using single-end MeDIP-seq. The genetic effects on the DMRs and the effect of DMRs on T2D were calculated using the AMS in each DMR. MeDIP-seq data have been deposited in EMBL under the accession code E-MTAB-3051.
DMR and giDMR discovery
DMRs and giDMRs were calculated using the MEDIPS RPM values. For T2D DMR estimation, the RPM values at each 500 bp bin were normalized to N (0, 1; standard normal distribution) before the analysis. Using a linear mixed effects model, we regressed methylation levels at each 500-bp window on fixed-effect terms, which included disease status (at the same time as the visit for the blood and DNA draw), BMI, age (for the blood and DNA withdraw), sex and random-effect terms denoting family structure. giDMRs were characterized among 34 (17 pairs) discordant monozygotic twins and p values were obtained from one-sample parametric t-test to assess whether the mean difference within twin pair for each DMR was significantly different from 0. Results from the discovery analyses are presented at a false discovery rate (FDR) of 25% (nominal P=1 × 10−4), estimated by Benjamini–Hochberg (95) q value43. The effect of DMR on T2D is calculated using a linear mixed effects model, we regressed AMS value for each DMR on fixed-effect terms, which included disease status, BMI, age, sex and random-effect terms denoting family structure.
To investigate the potential effect of medication use and cell subtype bias, we used records of any diabetes medication use and cell subtype counts data in the discovery samples. At each of the 4,545 suggestive T2D-DMRs we tested the effect of medication record and cell subtype data of DNA methylation levels. We fit a linear mixed effects model—BMI, age, sex, medication use (or cell subtype counts) were incorporated as fixed-effects and we included a random-effect term denoting family structure.
Illumina human methylation 450K array
Illumina Human Methylation 450K array data were used to validate the top T2D DMR results. The Illumina 450K array methylation values are reported as β, which represent the ratio of array intensity signal obtained from the methylated beads over the sum of methylated and unmethylated bead signals44,45.
In the validation, we matched 20 probes from whole-blood Illumina 450K array for 45 individuals to the top 31 DMRs (Supplementary Data 7). When a probe overlapped with the DMR, we used it for validation; otherwise, we selected the nearest probe to the DMRs within 10 kb. The methylation values for each probe were normalized to N (0, 1) before the analysis. We fitted a linear mixed effects model regressing methylation levels at each probe on the disease status of the individuals and included fixed effects (age, sex, BMI, beadchip, BS conversion efficiency and BS-treated DNA input) and random-effects (family-structure).
We also tested the selected DMRs methylation profile in skeletal muscle biopsies from 24 T2D patients and 6 controls (non-T2D but obese individuals).
Metabolomic data
Among the 54 MZ twin individuals, 36 had plasma and/or serum metabolites profiles. Altogether, 503 metabolites were measured using non-targeted technology gas chromatography–mass spectrometry and liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry46. Metabolites were reported as median normalized, correcting for the interday machine tuning effect by dividing each metabolite’s value by the median per run for the day. Then, the data were further standardized before the analyses. For the 36 MZ twins, the mean difference of metabolite levels within twin pair (affected–unaffected twin) was calculated. One-sample non-parametric test (Wilcoxon signed-rank test) was calculated to assess whether the mean difference for each metabolite was significantly different from 0. 50 metabolites nominally associated with DNA methylation (P<0.05) were then tested in the replication sample set. The meta-analysis of discovery (n=36 IDs) and replication (n=24 IDs) samples provided the overall p value for the association between metabolite levels and DNA methylation profiles.
Gene expression profiles
Gene expression results in adipose, skin and lymphoblastoid cell line tissue was extracted for 590 subjects from MuTHER study19. Gene expression levels were measured using the Illumina expression array HumanHT-12 version 3. Each sample had three technical replicates and log2-transformed expression signals, which were quantile normalized, first across three replicates of each individual, and then secondly by quantile normalization across all individuals. We used the transformed normalized residuals of the log-transformed gene expression array signal in this analysis.
Genotype data
Genotype data for the individuals in this study were obtained on a combination of Illumina platforms (HumanHap300, HumanHap610Q, 1M-Duo and 1.2MDuo 1M custom arrays). The genotypes were called with the Illuminus calling algorithm (maximum posterior probability of 0.95). Imputation was performed using the IMPUTE software package (v2) using two reference panels: P0 (HapMap2, rel 22, combined CEU) and P1 (610K+, including the combined HumanHap610K and 1M array). After imputation, SNPs were filtered for MAF of >5% and IMPUTE info value of >0.8 (ref. 19).
Methylation QTL identification
Cis methylation QTL at DMRs was analysed using SNPs within 50 kb of the region. For each DMR, the methylation values were normalized to N (0, 1), and we then fitted a linear model, regressing the methylation levels on fixed-effect terms including genotype, age and gender. Multiple testing was corrected for by the Bonferroni correction. We further tested whether methylation acts as a mediator between genotype and phenotype. This was assessed using the causal inference test8,31. The genetic effect on DMRs was calculated using a linear mixed effects model, we regressed the RPM value for each DMR on fixed-effect terms, which included disease status, BMI, age, sex and random-effect terms denoting family structure.
Trans methylation QTLs at DMRs were analysed in the replication sample using 2.1M SNPs in the genome (P=2.4 × 10−8, FDR=5%). For each DMR, the methylation values were normalized to N (0, 1), and we performed association analyses by using linear regression implemented in PLINK47, assuming additive genetic effects, with adjustment for age and sex.
Pathway analysis
Pathway analysis was performed using two methods: Cytoscape v2.83 (ref. 48) and GREAT49. We used DMR or giDMR annotated gene list for Cytoscape analysis with FDR <0.001. For GREAT, we analysed separately the T2D-DMR and giDMR regions and applied the regional-based binomial approach with the maximum distal extension reduced to from 1 Mb to 150 kb.
Additional information
How to cite this article: Yuan, W. et al. An integrated epigenomic analysis for type 2 diabetes susceptibility loci in monozygotic twins. Nat. Commun. 5:5719 doi: 10.1038/ncomms6719 (2014).
Accession codes: MeDIP-seq data have been deposited in EMBL under the accession code E-MTAB-3051.
Accession codes
References
Morris, A. P. et al. Large-scale association analysis provides insights into the genetic architecture and pathophysiology of type 2 diabetes. Nat. Genet. 44, 981–990 (2012).
Robertson, K. D. DNA methylation and human disease. Nat. Rev. Genet. 6, 597–610 (2005).
Rakyan, V. K., Down, T. A., Balding, D. J. & Beck, S. Epigenome-wide association studies for common human diseases. Nat. Rev. Genet. 12, 529–541 (2011).
Robaire, B. Is it my grandparents' fault? Nat. Med. 14, 1186–1187 (2008).
Bell, J. T. & Spector, T. D. A twin approach to unraveling epigenetics. Trends Genet. 27, 116–125 (2011).
Dempster, E. L. et al. Disease-associated epigenetic changes in monozygotic twins discordant for schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. Hum. Mol. Genet. 20, 4786–4796 (2011).
Gervin, K. et al. DNA methylation and gene expression changes in monozygotic twins discordant for psoriasis: identification of epigenetically dysregulated genes. PLoS Genet. 8, e1002454 (2012).
Liu, Y. et al. Epigenome-wide association data implicate DNA methylation as an intermediary of genetic risk in rheumatoid arthritis. Nat. Biotechnol. 31, 142–147 (2013).
Nair, S. S. et al. Comparison of methyl-DNA immunoprecipitation (MeDIP) and methyl-CpG binding domain (MBD) protein capture for genome-wide DNA methylation analysis reveal CpG sequence coverage bias. Epigenetics 6, 34–44 (2011).
Robinson, M. D., Statham, A. L., Speed, T. P. & Clark, S. J. Protocol matters: which methylome are you actually studying? Epigenomics 2, 587–598 (2010).
Ward, M. C. et al. Latent regulatory potential of human-specific repetitive elements. Mol. Cell 49, 262–272 (2013).
Li, H. & Homer, N. A survey of sequence alignment algorithms for next-generation sequencing. Brief Bioinform. 11, 473–483 (2010).
Chavez, L. et al. Computational analysis of genome-wide DNA methylation during the differentiation of human embryonic stem cells along the endodermal lineage. Genome Res. 20, 1441–1450 (2010).
Schlesinger, F., Smith, A. D., Gingeras, T. R., Hannon, G. J. & Hodges, E. De novo DNA demethylation and noncoding transcription define active intergenic regulatory elements. Genome Res. 23, 1601–1614 (2013).
Ziller, M. J. et al. Charting a dynamic DNA methylation landscape of the human genome. Nature 500, 477–481 (2013).
Ernst, J. et al. Mapping and analysis of chromatin state dynamics in nine human cell types. Nature 473, 43–49 (2011).
Thome, M. CARMA1, BCL-10 and MALT1 in lymphocyte development and activation. Nat. Rev. Immunol. 4, 348–359 (2004).
Kiechl, S. et al. Blockade of receptor activator of nuclear factor-kappaB (RANKL) signaling improves hepatic insulin resistance and prevents development of diabetes mellitus. Nat. Med. 19, 358–363 (2013).
Grundberg, E. et al. Mapping cis- and trans-regulatory effects across multiple tissues in twins. Nat. Genet. 44, 1084–1089 (2012).
Wu, C. et al. BioGPS: an extensible and customizable portal for querying and organizing gene annotation resources. Genome Biol. 10, R130 (2009).
Menni, C. et al. Biomarkers for type 2 diabetes and impaired fasting glucose using a nontargeted metabolomics approach. Diabetes 62, 4270–4276 (2013).
Adrian, T. E. et al. Rectal taurocholate increases L cell and insulin secretion, and decreases blood glucose and food intake in obese type 2 diabetic volunteers. Diabetologia 55, 2343–2347 (2012).
Falls, J. G., Pulford, D. J., Wylie, A. A. & Jirtle, R. L. Genomic imprinting: implications for human disease. Am. J. Pathol. 154, 635–647 (1999).
Kong, A. et al. Parental origin of sequence variants associated with complex diseases. Nature 462, 868–874 (2009).
Lawson, H. A., Cheverud, J. M. & Wolf, J. B. Genomic imprinting and parent-of-origin effects on complex traits. Nat. Rev. Genet. 14, 609–617 (2013).
Mackay, D. J. et al. Hypomethylation of multiple imprinted loci in individuals with transient neonatal diabetes is associated with mutations in ZFP57. Nat. Genet. 40, 949–951 (2008).
Cheverud, J. M. et al. Genomic imprinting effects on adult body composition in mice. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 105, 4253–4258 (2008).
Gluckman, P. D., Hanson, M. A., Cooper, C. & Thornburg, K. L. Effect of in utero and early-life conditions on adult health and disease. N. Engl. J. Med. 359, 61–73 (2008).
Ohno, H., Shinoda, K., Spiegelman, B. M. & Kajimura, S. PPARgamma agonists induce a white-to-brown fat conversion through stabilization of PRDM16 protein. Cell Metab. 15, 395–404 (2012).
Kajimura, S. et al. Regulation of the brown and white fat gene programs through a PRDM16/CtBP transcriptional complex. Genes Dev. 22, 1397–1409 (2008).
Millstein, J., Zhang, B., Zhu, J. & Schadt, E. E. Disentangling molecular relationships with a causal inference test. BMC Genet. 10, 23 (2009).
Nambu, H. et al. Characterization of metabolic phenotypes of mice lacking GPR61, an orphan G-protein coupled receptor. Life Sci. 89, 765–772 (2011).
Chin, J. E., Dickens, M., Tavare, J. M. & Roth, R. A. Overexpression of protein kinase C isoenzymes alpha, beta I, gamma, and epsilon in cells overexpressing the insulin receptor. Effects on receptor phosphorylation and signaling. J. Biol. Chem. 268, 6338–6347 (1993).
Koya, D. & King, G. L. Protein kinase C activation and the development of diabetic complications. Diabetes 47, 859–866 (1998).
Nishimura, S. et al. CD8+ effector T cells contribute to macrophage recruitment and adipose tissue inflammation in obesity. Nat. Med. 15, 914–920 (2009).
Gregor, M. F. & Hotamisligil, G. S. Inflammatory mechanisms in obesity. Annu. Rev. Immunol. 29, 415–445 (2011).
Vandanmagsar, B. et al. The NLRP3 inflammasome instigates obesity-induced inflammation and insulin resistance. Nat. Med. 17, 179–188 (2011).
Gkrania-Klotsas, E. et al. Differential white blood cell count and type 2 diabetes: systematic review and meta-analysis of cross-sectional and prospective studies. PLoS One 5, e13405 (2010).
Adalsteinsson, B. T. et al. Heterogeneity in white blood cells has potential to confound DNA methylation measurements. PLoS ONE 7, e46705 (2012).
Moayyeri, A., Hammond, C. J., Hart, D. J. & Spector, T. D. The UK Adult Twin Registry (TwinsUK Resource). Twin Res. Hum. Genet. 16, 144–149 (2013).
Andrews, S. A quality control tool for high throughput sequence data. Available at http://www.bioinformaticsbabrahamacuk/projects/fastqc/ (2010).
Hatem, A., Bozda, D., Toland, A. E. & Catalyurek, U. V. Benchmarking short sequence mapping tools. BMC Bioinformatics 14, 184 (2013).
Benjamini, Y. & Yosef, H. Controlling the false discovery rate: a practical and powerful approach to multiple testing. J. R. Stat. Soc. B 57, 289–300 (1995).
Sandoval, J. et al. Validation of a DNA methylation microarray for 450,000 CpG sites in the human genome. Epigenetics 6, 692–702 (2011).
Grundberg, E. et al. Global analysis of DNA methylation variation in adipose tissue from twins reveals links to disease-associated variants in distal regulatory elements. Am. J. Hum. Genet. 93, 876–890 (2013).
Suhre, K. et al. Human metabolic individuality in biomedical and pharmaceutical research. Nature 477, 54–60 (2011).
Purcell, S. et al. PLINK: a tool set for whole-genome association and population-based linkage analyses. Am. J. Hum. Genet. 81, 559–575 (2007).
Shannon, P. et al. Cytoscape: a software environment for integrated models of biomolecular interaction networks. Genome Res. 13, 2498–2504 (2003).
McLean, C. Y. et al. GREAT improves functional interpretation of cis-regulatory regions. Nat. Biotechnol. 28, 495–501 (2010).
Acknowledgements
Funding support for this project was obtained from the European Research Council (project number 250157) and BGI. The study was also supported by TwinsUK, which is funded by the Wellcome Trust; European Community’s Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013); and also receives support from the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) BioResource, Clinical Research Facility and Biomedical Research Centre based at Guy’s and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust and King’s College London. SNP Genotyping was performed by The Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute and National Eye Institute via NIH/CIDR. M.M. is the holder of Wellcome Trust Senior Investigator Award (Wellcome 098381). T.D.S. is the holder of an ERC Advanced Principal Investigator award (ERC 250157). A.P.M. is a Wellcome Trust Senior Research Fellow in Basic Biomedical Science (grant number WT098017). Skeletal muscle 450k methylation project is supported by European Community's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) under DEXLIFE project (grant agreement no. HEALTH-F2-2011-279228).
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
T.D.S., S.L.J., J.T.B. and J.W. conceived the study. W.Y. and J.T.B. led the analyses. K.S., I.E. and T.F. contributed to a part of the analyses. K.W., Y.X., F.G., H.W., Y.X., H.L., C.L.H. and L.Y. preformed sample selection, sequencing and contributed experimental or technical support. A.K.L., M.J.B., A.M., P.D., S.L.J. and M.M. contributed materials, reagents, technical support and discussion. W.Y., C.G.B. and J.T.B. prepared the manuscript, with contributions from K.W., K.S., A.K.L., M.J.B., S.L.J., M.I.M. and T.D.S. All authors read and approved the manuscript. J.T.B., J.W. and T.D.S. jointly supervised this work.
Corresponding authors
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
A.K.L., C.L.H., M.J.B., S.L.J. are employees of Pfizer Inc. The remaining authors declare no competing financial interests.
Supplementary information
Supplementary Figure
Supplementary Figure 1 (PDF 176 kb)
Supplementary Data 1
Demography of studying twins (XLSX 12 kb)
Supplementary Data 2
List of DMR which mapped to genes (XLSX 735 kb)
Supplementary Data 3
31 DMR genes validation (XLSX 11 kb)
Supplementary Data 4
Metabolites associate with MALT1 methylation (meta-analysis p value<0.0001 and discovery p value <0.05) (XLSX 917 kb)
Supplementary Data 5
DMRs in T2D GWAS loci (XLSX 9 kb)
Supplementary Data 6
T2D DMRs in other diseases genes (XLSX 15 kb)
Supplementary Data 7
DMR in known imprinted genes (XLSX 14 kb)
Supplementary Data 8
giDMR which mapped to genes (XLSX 93 kb)
Supplementary Data 9
giDMR DNA methylation difference in blood case-controls replication samples (XLSX 10 kb)
Supplementary Data 10
Pathway analysis for giDMR gene (XLSX 14 kb)
Rights and permissions
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in the credit line; if the material is not included under the Creative Commons license, users will need to obtain permission from the license holder to reproduce the material. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
About this article
Cite this article
Yuan, W., Xia, Y., Bell, C. et al. An integrated epigenomic analysis for type 2 diabetes susceptibility loci in monozygotic twins. Nat Commun 5, 5719 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms6719
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms6719
- Springer Nature Limited
This article is cited by
-
Ethanolamine plasmalogens derived from scallops stimulate both follicle-stimulating hormone and luteinizing hormone secretion by bovine gonadotrophs
Scientific Reports (2022)
-
Reduced gonadotroph stimulation by ethanolamine plasmalogens in old bovine brains
Scientific Reports (2021)
-
Causal associations of waist circumference and waist-to-hip ratio with type II diabetes mellitus: new evidence from Mendelian randomization
Molecular Genetics and Genomics (2021)
-
Associations of maternal early-pregnancy blood glucose and insulin concentrations with DNA methylation in newborns
Clinical Epigenetics (2020)
-
The role of DNA methylation in the pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes mellitus
Clinical Epigenetics (2020)