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Crucial role of iron in epigenetic rewriting during adipocyte differentiation mediated by JMJD1A and TET2 activity

Authors :
Tomohiro Suzuki
Tetsuro Komatsu
Hiroshi Shibata
Akiko Tanioka
Diana Vargas
Reika Kawabata-Iwakawa
Fumihito Miura
Shinnosuke Masuda
Mayuko Hayashi
Kyoko Tanimura-Inagaki
Sumiyo Morita
Junki Kohmaru
Koji Adachi
Masayuki Tobo
Hideru Obinata
Tasuku Hirayama
Hiroshi Kimura
Juro Sakai
Hideko Nagasawa
Hideyuki Itabashi
Izuho Hatada
Takashi Ito
Takeshi Inagaki
Source :
Nucleic Acids Research.
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2023.

Abstract

Iron metabolism is closely associated with the pathogenesis of obesity. However, the mechanism of the iron-dependent regulation of adipocyte differentiation remains unclear. Here, we show that iron is essential for rewriting of epigenetic marks during adipocyte differentiation. Iron supply through lysosome-mediated ferritinophagy was found to be crucial during the early stage of adipocyte differentiation, and iron deficiency during this period suppressed subsequent terminal differentiation. This was associated with demethylation of both repressive histone marks and DNA in the genomic regions of adipocyte differentiation-associated genes, including Pparg, which encodes PPARĪ³, the master regulator of adipocyte differentiation. In addition, we identified several epigenetic demethylases to be responsible for iron-dependent adipocyte differentiation, with the histone demethylase jumonji domain-containing 1A and the DNA demethylase ten-eleven translocation 2 as the major enzymes. The interrelationship between repressive histone marks and DNA methylation was indicated by an integrated genome-wide association analysis, and was also supported by the findings that both histone and DNA demethylation were suppressed by either the inhibition of lysosomal ferritin flux or the knockdown of iron chaperone poly(rC)-binding protein 2. In summary, epigenetic regulations through iron-dependent control of epigenetic enzyme activities play an important role in the organized gene expression mechanisms of adipogenesis.

Subjects

Subjects :
Genetics

Details

ISSN :
13624962 and 03051048
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nucleic Acids Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........2f07dc38b56670ab6d2e71ebac696760