Epigenetics, obesity and early-life cadmium or lead exposure
- Sarah S. Park,
- David A. Skaar,
- Randy L. Jirtle,
- Cathrine Hoyo
- North Carolina State University,
- ,
- University of Wisconsin-Madison
Sustainable Development Goals
- SDG 3 Good Health and Well
Abstract
Obesity is a complex and multifactorial disease, which likely comprises multiple subtypes. Emerging data have linked chemical exposures to obesity. As organismal response to environmental exposures includes altered gene expression, identifying the regulatory epigenetic changes involved would be key to understanding the path from exposure to phenotype and provide new tools for exposure detection and risk assessment. In this report, we summarize published data linking early-life exposure to the heavy metals, cadmium and lead, to obesity. We also discuss potential mechanisms, as well as the need for complete coverage in epigenetic screening to fully identify alterations. The keys to understanding how metal exposure contributes to obesity are improved assessment of exposure and comprehensive establishment of epigenetic profiles that may serve as markers for exposures.
Publication Information
Output type
Original language
EnglishPages from-to (Number of pages)
Pages 57-75 (19 pages)Journal (Volume, Issue Number)
Epigenomics (Volume 9, Issue 1)Publication milestones
- Accepted/In press - 19/10/2016
- Published - 16/12/2016
Publication status
ISSN
1750-1911External Publication IDs
- Scopus: 85009080505
- PubMed: 27981852
