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Trim28 Haploinsufficiency Triggers Bi-stable Epigenetic Obesity
Author(s) -
Kevin Dalgaard,
Kathrin Landgraf,
Steffen Heyne,
Adelheid Lempradl,
John Longinotto,
Klaus Gossens,
Marius Ruf,
Michael Orthofer,
Ruslan Strogantsev,
Madhan Selvaraj,
Tess Tsai-Hsiu Lu,
Eduard Casas,
Raffaele Teperino,
M. Azim Surani,
Ilona Zvetkova,
Debra Rimmington,
Y.C. Loraine Tung,
Brian Lam,
Rachel Larder,
Giles S.H. Yeo,
Stephen O’Rahilly,
Tanya Vavouri,
Emma Whitelaw,
Josef Penninger,
Thomas Jenuwein,
ChingLung Cheung,
Anne C. FergusonSmith,
Anthony P. Coll,
Antje Körner,
J. Andrew Pospisilik
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2015.12.025
Subject(s) - biology , haploinsufficiency , epigenetics , epigenesis , obesity , genetics , dna methylation , computational biology , gene , endocrinology , phenotype , gene expression
More than one-half billion people are obese, and despite progress in genetic research, much of the heritability of obesity remains enigmatic. Here, we identify a Trim28-dependent network capable of triggering obesity in a non-Mendelian, "on/off" manner. Trim28(+/D9) mutant mice exhibit a bi-modal body-weight distribution, with isogenic animals randomly emerging as either normal or obese and few intermediates. We find that the obese-"on" state is characterized by reduced expression of an imprinted gene network including Nnat, Peg3, Cdkn1c, and Plagl1 and that independent targeting of these alleles recapitulates the stochastic bi-stable disease phenotype. Adipose tissue transcriptome analyses in children indicate that humans too cluster into distinct sub-populations, stratifying according to Trim28 expression, transcriptome organization, and obesity-associated imprinted gene dysregulation. These data provide evidence of discrete polyphenism in mouse and man and thus carry important implications for complex trait genetics, evolution, and medicine.

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