TY - JOUR
T1 - Epigenetic mechanisms underlying maternal diabetes-associated risk of congenital heart disease
AU - Basu, Madhumita
AU - Zhu, Jun Yi
AU - LaHaye, Stephanie
AU - Majumdar, Uddalak
AU - Jiao, Kai
AU - Han, Zhe
AU - Garg, Vidu
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors thank members of the Biomorphology Core at NCH for histology support. We are grateful to N. Huang, D. Bauer, and J. Feller for technical assistance; E. Alexy for biostatistical analysis; and T. Vondriska, B. Lilly, and D. Srivastava for helpful comments and critical review of the manuscript. MB was supported by the NCH Postdoctoral Idea Award and an American Heart Association Postdoctoral Fellowship (15POST25510006). ZH is supported by grants from NIH (R01-HL090801; R01-NK098410), and VG is supported by funding from NIH (R01-HL121797; R01-HL109758) and NCH.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 American Society for Clinical Investigation. All rights reserved.
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - Birth defects are the leading cause of infant mortality, and they are caused by a combination of genetic and environmental factors. Environmental risk factors may contribute to birth defects in genetically susceptible infants by altering critical molecular pathways during embryogenesis, but experimental evidence for gene-environment interactions is limited. Fetal hyperglycemia associated with maternal diabetes results in a 5-fold increased risk of congenital heart disease (CHD), but the molecular basis for this correlation is unknown. Here, we show that the effects of maternal hyperglycemia on cardiac development are sensitized by haploinsufficiency of Notch1, a key transcriptional regulator known to cause CHD. Using ATAC-seq, we found that hyperglycemia decreased chromatin accessibility at the endothelial NO synthase (Nos3) locus, resulting in reduced NO synthesis. Transcription of Jarid2, a regulator of histone methyltransferase complexes, was increased in response to reduced NO, and this upregulation directly resulted in inhibition of Notch1 expression to levels below a threshold necessary for normal heart development. We extended these findings using a Drosophila maternal diabetic model that revealed the evolutionary conservation of this interaction and the Jarid2-mediated mechanism. These findings identify a gene-environment interaction between maternal hyperglycemia and Notch signaling and support a model in which environmental factors cause birth defects in genetically susceptible infants.
AB - Birth defects are the leading cause of infant mortality, and they are caused by a combination of genetic and environmental factors. Environmental risk factors may contribute to birth defects in genetically susceptible infants by altering critical molecular pathways during embryogenesis, but experimental evidence for gene-environment interactions is limited. Fetal hyperglycemia associated with maternal diabetes results in a 5-fold increased risk of congenital heart disease (CHD), but the molecular basis for this correlation is unknown. Here, we show that the effects of maternal hyperglycemia on cardiac development are sensitized by haploinsufficiency of Notch1, a key transcriptional regulator known to cause CHD. Using ATAC-seq, we found that hyperglycemia decreased chromatin accessibility at the endothelial NO synthase (Nos3) locus, resulting in reduced NO synthesis. Transcription of Jarid2, a regulator of histone methyltransferase complexes, was increased in response to reduced NO, and this upregulation directly resulted in inhibition of Notch1 expression to levels below a threshold necessary for normal heart development. We extended these findings using a Drosophila maternal diabetic model that revealed the evolutionary conservation of this interaction and the Jarid2-mediated mechanism. These findings identify a gene-environment interaction between maternal hyperglycemia and Notch signaling and support a model in which environmental factors cause birth defects in genetically susceptible infants.
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U2 - 10.1172/jci.insight.95085
DO - 10.1172/jci.insight.95085
M3 - Article
C2 - 29046480
AN - SCOPUS:85049621602
SN - 2379-3708
VL - 2
JO - JCI insight
JF - JCI insight
IS - 20
M1 - A49
ER -