International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Oct 2022)

<i>SERPINE1</i> DNA Methylation Levels Quantified in Blood Cells at Five Years of Age Are Associated with Adiposity and Plasma PAI-1 Levels at Five Years of Age

  • Amelie Taschereau,
  • Véronique Desgagné,
  • Sabrina Faleschini,
  • Renée Guérin,
  • Catherine Allard,
  • Patrice Perron,
  • Marie-France Hivert,
  • Luigi Bouchard

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms231911833
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 19
p. 11833

Abstract

Read online

Plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI-1) expression has been associated with a higher risk of development of obesity. DNA methylation (DNAm) is an epigenetic mechanism regulating gene transcription and likely involved in the fetal programming of childhood obesity. Our study aimed to assess the associations between PAI-1 gene (SERPINE1) DNAm, plasma PAI-1 levels, and adiposity at five years of age. We analyzed DNAm and anthropometric data from 146 girls and 177 boys from the Gen3G prospective birth cohort. We assessed adiposity using BMI z-scores, waist circumference, total skinfolds, and percentages of total, android, and trunk fat measured by dual-energy radiography (DXA). We estimated blood cell DNAm levels at 15 CpG sites within SERPINE1 using the methylationEPIC array. After correction for multiple testing, we found that lower DNAm in SERPINE1 intron 3 (cg11353706) was associated with greater adiposity levels in girls (waist circumference: r = −0.258, p = 0.002; skinfolds: r = −0.212, p = 0. 013; android fat: r = −0.215, p = 0.015; BMI z-score: r = −0.278, p SERPINE1 promoter (cg19722814) was associated with higher plasma PAI-1 levels in boys (r = −0.178, p = 0.021). Our study suggests that DNAm levels at the SERPINE1 gene locus are negatively correlated with adiposity, but not with plasma PAI-1 levels, in young girls only.

Keywords