Publications

Research outputs, reports, policy briefs and knowledge products from KIU scholars and partners.

2026 School of Pharmacy IAA Journal of Scientific Research

Epigenetic Alterations in Obesity-Driven Type 2 Diabetes: Implications for Personalized Medicine

Abaho Areeba Fortunate

Obesity-driven type 2 diabetes (T2D) reflects chronic environmental stress overnutrition, inactivity, and circadian disruption imprinted onto chromatin in metabolic tissues. Epigenetic changes integrate nutrient, hormonal, and inflammatory cues into durable programs of gene expression without altering DNA sequence. Across adipose tissue, liver, skeletal muscle, pancreatic islets, and hypothalamus, obesity associates with characteristic shifts in DNA methylation; histone acetylation/methylation; nucleosome positioning and 3-D genome architecture; and non-coding RNA networks. These programs rewire pathways for insulin signaling, substrate partitioning, mitochondrial biogenesis, and secretory function, helping explain heterogeneity in diabetes risk and treatment response. Importantly, many marks remain plastic: weight loss, exercise, bariatric/metabolic surgery, and diet quality partially reset epigenomes; conversely, “metabolic memory” preserves adverse marks after glycemic normalization, contributing to residual risk. Microbiome-derived metabolites (e.g., short-chain fatty acids) and endocrine disruptors add upstream layers of modulation. Translational opportunities include (i) blood-based and tissue-informed epigenetic biomarkers to stage disease and predict drug response; (ii) repurposed or next-generation “epidrugs” that modulate writers, erasers, and readers; (iii) nutriepigenomic strategies aligned to an individual’s epigenetic phenotype; and (iv) targeted epigenome editing that alters regulatory elements without changing DNA sequence. Safety, durability, and equity are central challenges. This review synthesizes organ-specific epigenetic mechanisms linking obesity to T2D, examines interactions with inflammation and mitochondrial stress, and outlines a precision-medicine roadmap that leverages multi-omics and modifiable exposures to restore metabolic flexibility and reduce long-term complications.