Division of Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, 27713, USA.
Department of Biostatistics, Duke University, Durham, 27710, USA.
Clin Epigenetics. 2021 Jan 25;13(1):17. doi: 10.1186/s13148-020-00997-0.
Male obesity has profound effects on morbidity and mortality, but relatively little is known about the impact of obesity on gametes and the potential for adverse effects of male obesity to be passed to the next generation. DNA methylation contributes to gene regulation and is erased and re-established during gametogenesis. Throughout post-pubertal spermatogenesis, there are continual needs to both maintain established methylation and complete DNA methylation programming, even during epididymal maturation. This dynamic epigenetic landscape may confer increased vulnerability to environmental influences, including the obesogenic environment, that could disrupt reprogramming fidelity. Here we conducted an exploratory analysis that showed that overweight/obesity (n = 20) is associated with differences in mature spermatozoa DNA methylation profiles relative to controls with normal BMI (n = 47).
We identified 3264 CpG sites in human sperm that are significantly associated with BMI (p < 0.05) using Infinium HumanMethylation450 BeadChips. These CpG sites were significantly overrepresented among genes involved in transcriptional regulation and misregulation in cancer, nervous system development, and stem cell pluripotency. Analysis of individual sperm using bisulfite sequencing of cloned alleles revealed that the methylation differences are present in a subset of sperm rather than being randomly distributed across all sperm.
Male obesity is associated with altered sperm DNA methylation profiles that appear to affect reprogramming fidelity in a subset of sperm, suggestive of an influence on the spermatogonia. Further work is required to determine the potential heritability of these DNA methylation alterations. If heritable, these changes have the potential to impede normal development.
男性肥胖对发病率和死亡率有深远影响,但人们对肥胖对配子的影响以及男性肥胖的潜在不良影响传递给下一代的可能性知之甚少。DNA 甲基化有助于基因调控,并在配子发生过程中被抹去和重新建立。在青春期后精子发生过程中,不仅需要维持已建立的甲基化,还需要完成 DNA 甲基化编程,即使在附睾成熟过程中也是如此。这种动态的表观遗传景观可能会增加对环境影响的易感性,包括肥胖环境,这可能会破坏重新编程的保真度。在这里,我们进行了一项探索性分析,表明超重/肥胖(n=20)与对照组正常 BMI(n=47)相比,与成熟精子 DNA 甲基化谱相关的差异。
我们使用 Infinium HumanMethylation450 BeadChips 鉴定了 3264 个人类精子中的 CpG 位点,这些 CpG 位点与 BMI 显著相关(p<0.05)。这些 CpG 位点在参与转录调节和癌症、神经系统发育和干细胞多能性的基因中显著过表达。使用克隆等位基因的亚硫酸氢盐测序对单个精子进行分析表明,甲基化差异存在于精子的一部分中,而不是随机分布在所有精子中。
男性肥胖与精子 DNA 甲基化谱的改变有关,这些改变似乎影响了精子的重新编程保真度,提示对精原细胞有影响。需要进一步研究来确定这些 DNA 甲基化改变的潜在遗传性。如果可遗传,这些变化有可能阻碍正常发育。