Epigenetic Link Between Statin Therapy and Type 2 Diabetes
Author(s) -
Carolina OchoaRosales,
Eliana Portilla-Fernández,
Jano,
Rory Wilson,
Benjamin Lehne,
Pashupati P. Mishra,
Xu Gao,
Mohsen Ghanbari,
Oscar L. RuedaOchoa,
Diana L. Juvinao-Quintero,
Marie Loh,
Weihua Zhang,
Jaspal S. Kooner,
Hans J. Grabe,
Stephan B. Felix,
Ben Schöttker,
Yan Zhang,
Christian Gieger,
Martina MüllerNurasyid,
Margit Heier,
Annette Peters,
Terho Lehtimäki,
Alexander Teumer,
Hermann Brenner,
Mélanie Waldenberger,
M. Arfan Ikram,
Joyce B. J. van Meurs,
Oscar H. Franco,
Trudy Voortman,
John C. Chambers,
Bruno H. Stricker,
Taulant Muka
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
diabetes care
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.636
H-Index - 363
eISSN - 1935-5548
pISSN - 0149-5992
DOI - 10.2337/dc19-1828
Subject(s) - type 2 diabetes , insulin resistance , medicine , dnam , statin , epigenetics , dna methylation , endocrinology , diabetes mellitus , insulin , bioinformatics , biology , genetics , gene expression , gene
OBJECTIVE To investigate the role of epigenetics in statins’ diabetogenic effect comparing DNA methylation (DNAm) between statin users and nonusers in an epigenome-wide association study in blood. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Five cohort studies’ participants (n = 8,270) were classified as statin users when they were on statin therapy at the time of DNAm assessment with Illumina 450K or EPIC array or noncurrent users otherwise. Associations of DNAm with various outcomes like incident type 2 diabetes, plasma glucose, insulin, and insulin resistance (HOMA of insulin resistance [HOMA-IR]) as well as with gene expression were investigated. RESULTS Discovery (n = 6,820) and replication (n = 1,450) phases associated five DNAm sites with statin use: cg17901584 (1.12 × 10−25 [DHCR24]), cg10177197 (3.94 × 10−08 [DHCR24]), cg06500161 (2.67 × 10−23 [ABCG1]), cg27243685 (6.01 × 10−09 [ABCG1]), and cg05119988 (7.26 × 10−12 [SC4MOL]). Two sites were associated with at least one glycemic trait or type 2 diabetes. Higher cg06500161 methylation was associated with higher fasting glucose, insulin, HOMA-IR, and type 2 diabetes (odds ratio 1.34 [95% CI 1.22, 1.47]). Mediation analyses suggested that ABCG1 methylation partially mediates the effect of statins on high insulin and HOMA-IR. Gene expression analyses showed that statin exposure and ABCG1 methylation were associated with ABCG1 downregulation, suggesting epigenetic regulation of ABCG1 expression. Further, outcomes insulin and HOMA-IR were significantly associated with ABCG1 expression. CONCLUSIONS This study sheds light on potential mechanisms linking statins with type 2 diabetes risk, providing evidence on DNAm partially mediating statins’ effects on insulin traits. Further efforts shall disentangle the molecular mechanisms through which statins may induce DNAm changes, potentially leading to ABCG1 epigenetic regulation.
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