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Obesity is currently a leading global health concern. Treatments include undergoing a weight-loss regimen. However, successful weight-loss is variable, where the heritability of obesity is considered part of the cause. This patient variability to weight-loss was addressed by Carayol et al. (2017), where protein plasma level changes was associated to genetic variability and changes in BMI under a low-calorie diet intervention. A highly significant association region was found to regulate downstream gene FAM46A; coding for a nucleotidyl-transferase protein. Loss of function mutations in FAM46A have previously been discovered in multiple human diseases, such as osteogenesis imperfecta. However, there is a lack of understanding of FAM46Aâs function, especially in the context of adipose tissue and metabolism. This thesis aimed to follow up on the Carayol et al. study by investigating the transcriptional regulation of FAM46A and how the associated region is influencing this regulation, as well as how FAM46A is involved in adipose tissue function. When mapping the physical DNA interaction network around the associated region using chromosome conformation capture (3C) in human subcutaneous adipocytes (SGBS cells), no interactions between the FAM46A promoter and selected loci of the associated region were found. Interestingly, significant interaction peaks downstream of the promoter overlapped with regions of open chromatin and were enriched for transcription factor (TF) motifs that are involved in stem cell differentiation and TGFβ signalling. SMAD4, part of the TGFβ signalling pathway, binds to this region, indicating a potential regulator of FAM46A. To address FAM46Aâs potential role in adipocyte function, FAM46A expression was disrupted in vitro in differentiating adipocytes. Reduction of FAM46A expression in SGBS cells resulted in decreased expression of PPARG and CEBPA, the master regulators of adipogenesis, complemented by a reduction in lipid accumulation. Follow up studies in murine mesenchymal stem cells where Fam46a was over-expressed were controversial as this led to a decrease in adipogenic markers (Adipoq and PPARðŸ). Overall, disruption of FAM46A expression led to opposing changes in adipogenic potential, suggesting the requirement for a more stable cell system to study FAM46A in vitro. To further characterise the role of Fam46a, metabolic phenotyping of a Fam46a knockout (KO) mouse model under hyper-caloric stress was performed in collaboration with the IMG in Prague. This model revealed a significantly smaller mouse, and increased plasma alkaline phosphatase, as previously observed. When fed a high-fat diet, KO mice had reduced overall fat mass, improved glucose clearance and reduced adipocyte size in both subcutaneous and visceral white adipose tissue (subWAT/visWAT) depots. Transcriptomic analysis of these two depots revealed an up-regulation of genes expressed in ribosome related pathways in the subWAT, whereas the visWAT showed the up-regulation of fatty acid metabolism pathways, suggesting that the KO adipose tissue is more metabolically active. Other down-regulated pathways involved stem cell differentiation and BMP/TGFβ-signalling. In conclusion, this study found the possible regulation of the FAM46A promoter by TFs involved in adipogenesis regulation, such as SMAD proteins, as well as strengthening its possible functional involvement in TGFβ signalling by enrichment of this pathway in KO studies.
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