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COL6A3-derived endotrophin mediates the effect of obesity on coronary artery disease: an integrative proteogenomics analysis

Authors :
Satoshi Yoshiji
Tianyuan Lu
Guillaume Butler-Laporte
Julia Carrasco-Zanini-Sanchez
Yiheng Chen
Kevin Liang
Julian Daniel Sunday Willett
Chen-Yang Su
Shidong Wang
Darin Adra
Yann Ilboudo
Takayoshi Sasako
Vincenzo Forgetta
Yossi Farjoun
Hugo Zeberg
Sirui Zhou
Michael Hultström
Mitchell Machiela
Nicholas J. Wareham
Vincent Mooser
Nicholas J. Timpson
Claudia Langenberg
J. Brent Richards
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2023.

Abstract

Obesity strongly increases the risk of cardiometabolic diseases, yet the underlying mediators of this relationship are not fully understood. Given that obesity has broad effects on circulating protein levels, we investigated circulating proteins that mediate the effects of obesity on coronary artery disease (CAD), stroke, and type 2 diabetes—since doing so may prioritize targets for therapeutic intervention. By integrating proteome-wide Mendelian randomization (MR) screening 4,907 plasma proteins, colocalization, and mediation analyses, we identified seven plasma proteins, including collagen type VI α3 (COL6A3). COL6A3 was strongly increased by body mass index (BMI) (β= 0.32, 95% CI: 0.26–0.38,P= 3.7 × 10-8per s.d. increase in BMI) and increased the risk of CAD (OR = 1.47, 95% CI:1.26–1.70,P= 4.5 × 10-7per s.d. increase in COL6A3). Notably, COL6A3 is cleaved at its C-terminus to produce endotrophin, which was found to mediate this effect on CAD. In single-cell RNA sequencing of adipose tissues and coronary arteries,COL6A3was highly expressed in cell types involved in metabolic dysfunction and fibrosis. Finally, we found that body fat reduction can reduce plasma levels of COL6A3-derived endotrophin, thereby highlighting a tractable way to modify endotrophin levels. In summary, we provide actionable insights into how circulating proteins mediate the effect of obesity on cardiometabolic diseases and prioritize endotrophin as a potential therapeutic target.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........2ab6a7a19af1080182d05d2458a900b1