Genes (Apr 2023)

Differential Methylation of Telomere-Related Genes Is Associated with Kidney Disease in Individuals with Type 1 Diabetes

  • Claire Hill,
  • Seamus Duffy,
  • Laura M. Kettyle,
  • Liane McGlynn,
  • Niina Sandholm,
  • Rany M. Salem,
  • Alex Thompson,
  • Elizabeth J. Swan,
  • Jill Kilner,
  • Peter Rossing,
  • Paul G. Shiels,
  • Maria Lajer,
  • Per-Henrik Groop,
  • Alexander Peter Maxwell,
  • Amy Jayne McKnight,
  • on behalf of the GENIE Consortium

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/genes14051029
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 5
p. 1029

Abstract

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Diabetic kidney disease (DKD) represents a major global health problem. Accelerated ageing is a key feature of DKD and, therefore, characteristics of accelerated ageing may provide useful biomarkers or therapeutic targets. Harnessing multi-omics, features affecting telomere biology and any associated methylome dysregulation in DKD were explored. Genotype data for nuclear genome polymorphisms in telomere-related genes were extracted from genome-wide case–control association data (n = 823 DKD/903 controls; n = 247 end-stage kidney disease (ESKD)/1479 controls). Telomere length was established using quantitative polymerase chain reaction. Quantitative methylation values for 1091 CpG sites in telomere-related genes were extracted from epigenome-wide case–control association data (n = 150 DKD/100 controls). Telomere length was significantly shorter in older age groups (p = 7.6 × 10−6). Telomere length was also significantly reduced (p = 6.6 × 10−5) in DKD versus control individuals, with significance remaining after covariate adjustment (p = 0.028). DKD and ESKD were nominally associated with telomere-related genetic variation, with Mendelian randomisation highlighting no significant association between genetically predicted telomere length and kidney disease. A total of 496 CpG sites in 212 genes reached epigenome-wide significance (p ≤ 10−8) for DKD association, and 412 CpG sites in 193 genes for ESKD. Functional prediction revealed differentially methylated genes were enriched for Wnt signalling involvement. Harnessing previously published RNA-sequencing datasets, potential targets where epigenetic dysregulation may result in altered gene expression were revealed, useful as potential diagnostic and therapeutic targets for intervention.

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