• Bmc Med · Jun 2014

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    β cells keep bad epigenetic memories of palmitate.

    • Delphine Fradin and Pierre Bougnères.
    • Inserm U986, Pincus Building, Bicêtre Hospital, Paris Sud University, 94275 Le Kremlin Bicêtre, France. pierre.bougneres@inserm.fr.
    • Bmc Med. 2014 Jun 23; 12: 104.

    AbstractPalmitic acid, or hexadecanoic acid, a 16-carbon saturated fatty acid (FA), accounts for approximately 38% of the total circulating FA in lean or obese humans. In an article published in BMC Medicine, Hall et al. report that cultured islets from healthy donors, when exposed to palmitate, undergo changes in CpG methylation that are associated with modifications of expression in 290 genes. Their results provide a first look at the mechanisms used by the endocrine pancreas of humans to keep a durable genomic imprint from their exposure to FA that can influence gene expression and possibly cell phenotype in the long term. It is likely that such studies will help understand the epigenetic response of β cells to a disturbed metabolic environment, especially one created by obesity.

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