PLoS Genetics (Jan 2012)

An Alu element-associated hypermethylation variant of the POMC gene is associated with childhood obesity.

  • Peter Kuehnen,
  • Mona Mischke,
  • Susanna Wiegand,
  • Christine Sers,
  • Bernhard Horsthemke,
  • Susanne Lau,
  • Thomas Keil,
  • Young-Ae Lee,
  • Annette Grueters,
  • Heiko Krude

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1002543
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 3
p. e1002543

Abstract

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The individual risk for common diseases not only depends on genetic but also on epigenetic polymorphisms. To assess the role of epigenetic variations in the individual risk for obesity, we have determined the methylation status of two CpG islands at the POMC locus in obese and normal-weight children. We found a hypermethylation variant targeting individual CpGs at the intron 2-exon 3 boundary of the POMC gene by bisulphite sequencing that was significantly associated with obesity. POMC exon 3 hypermethylation interferes with binding of the transcription enhancer P300 and reduces expression of the POMC transcript. Since intron 2 contains Alu elements that are known to influence methylation in their genomic vicinity, the exon 3 methylation variant seems to result from an Alu element-triggered default state of methylation boundary definition. Exon 3 hypermethylation in the POMC locus represents the first identified DNA methylation variant that is associated with the individual risk for obesity.