Serum levels of the novel adipokine isthmin‑1 are associated with obesity in pubertal boys
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Ruiz Ojeda, Francisco Javier; Anguita Ruiz, Augusto; Cruz Rico, María; Gil Hernández, Ángel; Aguilera García, Concepción MaríaEditorial
Springer
Materia
Children Epigenetics Isthmin-1 Obesity Puberty
Fecha
2023-01-03Referencia bibliográfica
Ruiz-Ojeda, F.J... [et al.]. Serum levels of the novel adipokine isthmin-1 are associated with obesity in pubertal boys. World J Pediatr (2023). [https://doi.org/10.1007/s12519-022-00665-8]
Patrocinador
Universidad de Granada/CBUA; Plan Nacional de Investigacion Cientifica, Desarrollo e Innovacion Tecnologica (I + D + I), Instituto de Salud Carlos III-Health Research Funding (FONDOS FEDER) PI051968 PI1102042 PI1600871; Redes tematicas de Investigacion cooperativa RETIC Red SAMID RD12/0026/0015; Mapfre FoundationResumen
Objectives To evaluate whether there is an association between the serum levels of the novel insulin-like adipokine isthmin-
1 (ISM1) and obesity-related phenotypes in a population of Spanish children and to investigate the plausible molecular
alterations behind the alteration of the serum levels of this protein in children with obesity.
Methods The study population is a sub-cohort of the PUBMEP research project, consisting of a cross-sectional population
of 119 pubertal children with overweight (17 boys, 19 girls), obesity (20 boys, 25 girls), and normal weight (17 boys,
21 girls). All subjects were classified into experimental groups according to their sex, obesity, and insulin resistance (IR)
status. They were counted anthropometry, glucose and lipid metabolism, inflammation and cardiovascular biomarkers as
well as isthmin-1 (ISM1) serum levels. This population was intended as a discovery population to elucidate the relationship
between obesity and ISM1 levels in children. Furthermore, the study population had blood whole-genome DNA methylation
examined, allowing deepening into the obesity–ISM1 molecular relationship.
Results Higher serum ISM1 levels were observed in boys with obesity than in normal weight (P = 0.004) and overweight
(P = 0.007) boys. ISM1 serum levels were positively associated with body mass index (BMI) Z-score (P = 0.005) and fat mass
(P = 0.058) and negatively associated with myeloperoxidase (MPO) (P = 0.043) in boys. Although we did not find associations
between ISM1 serum levels and metabolic outcomes in girls, which may indicate a putative sexual dimorphism, fat mass was
positively associated in all children, including boys and girls (P = 0.011). DNA methylation levels in two-enhancer-related
CpG sites of ISM1 (cg03304641 and cg14269097) were associated with serum levels of ISM1 in children.
Conclusions ISM1 is associated with obesity in boys at the pubertal stage, elucidating how this protein might be of special relevance
as a new biomarker of obesity in children. Further studies including a longitudinal design during puberty are needed.