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Epigenome-wide association analysis revealed that SOCS3 methylation influences the effect of cumulative stress on obesity.

Citation
Xu, K., et al. “Epigenome-Wide Association Analysis Revealed That Socs3 Methylation Influences The Effect Of Cumulative Stress On Obesity.”. Biological Psychology, pp. 63-71.
Center Yale University
Author Ke Xu, Xinyu Zhang, Zuoheng Wang, Ying Hu, Rajita Sinha
Keywords Body mass index, Cumulative stress, Epigenome-wide association, obesity, SOCS3
Abstract

Chronic stress has a significant impact on obesity. However, how stress influences obesity remains unclear. We conducted an epigenome-wide DNA methylation association analysis of obesity (N=510) and examined whether cumulative stress influenced the DNA methylation on body weight. We identified 20 CpG sites associated with body mass index at the false discovery rate q<0.05, including a novel site, cg18181703, in suppressor of cytokine signaling 3 (SOCS3) gene (coefficient β=-0.0022, FDR q=4.94×10). The interaction between cg18181703 and cumulative adverse life stress contributed to variations in body weight (p=0.002). Individuals with at least five major life events and lower methylation of cg1818703 showed a 1.38-fold higher risk of being obese (95%CI: 1.17-1.76). Our findings suggest that aberrant in DNA methylation is associated with body weight and that methylation of SOCS3 moderates the effect of cumulative stress on obesity.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Biological psychology
Volume
131
Number of Pages
63-71
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1873-6246
DOI
10.1016/j.biopsycho.2016.11.001
Alternate Journal
Biol Psychol
PMID
27826092
PMCID
PMC5419875
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