[HTML][HTML] Cytosine methylation changes in enhancer regions of core pro-fibrotic genes characterize kidney fibrosis development

YA Ko, D Mohtat, M Suzuki, ASD Park, MC Izquierdo… - Genome biology, 2013 - Springer
YA Ko, D Mohtat, M Suzuki, ASD Park, MC Izquierdo, SY Han, HM Kang, H Si, T Hostetter…
Genome biology, 2013Springer
Background One in eleven people is affected by chronic kidney disease, a condition
characterized by kidney fibrosis and progressive loss of kidney function. Epidemiological
studies indicate that adverse intrauterine and postnatal environments have a long-lasting
role in chronic kidney disease development. Epigenetic information represents a plausible
carrier for mediating this programming effect. Here we demonstrate that genome-wide
cytosine methylation patterns of healthy and chronic kidney disease tubule samples …
Background
One in eleven people is affected by chronic kidney disease, a condition characterized by kidney fibrosis and progressive loss of kidney function. Epidemiological studies indicate that adverse intrauterine and postnatal environments have a long-lasting role in chronic kidney disease development. Epigenetic information represents a plausible carrier for mediating this programming effect. Here we demonstrate that genome-wide cytosine methylation patterns of healthy and chronic kidney disease tubule samples obtained from patients show significant differences.
Results
We identify differentially methylated regions and validate these in a large replication dataset. The differentially methylated regions are rarely observed on promoters, but mostly overlap with putative enhancer regions, and they are enriched in consensus binding sequences for important renal transcription factors. This indicates their importance in gene expression regulation. A core set of genes that are known to be related to kidney fibrosis, including genes encoding collagens, show cytosine methylation changes correlating with downstream transcript levels.
Conclusions
Our report raises the possibility that epigenetic dysregulation plays a role in chronic kidney disease development via influencing core pro-fibrotic pathways and can aid the development of novel biomarkers and future therapeutics.
Springer