Option 1.
Edit your post (no "PS", no "Edit" header, just edit your post so it reads naturally and incorporates the improvements as you see fit).
Upvote the comment, and optionally comment ping the other user to let them know you've incorporated their suggestion, so they can delete their comment if they wish.
Generally, I wouldn't mention the origin of the suggestion within the post. Ideally that comment will be deleted, so referring to a now deleted comment seems rather distracting and impractical. You can always use the edit summary to leave trace of the attribution, if you feel inclined. This way at least it won't clutter the post (although in fairness this kind of attribution won't be read by many users).
After incorporating the changes, flagging as NLN is logically a good choice, but sometimes it's not obvious for mods that the post was edited to incorporate the suggestion. There could be some difference between the suggestion and the actual edit, or other subtleties that require close inspection.
In any case, it necessitates the mod opening the post and compare it with the comment to see if the flag is really appropriate or the flagger is trying to get rid of a valid comment.
You could "custom flag" to explain this to the mod. I thought this would be a bit of overkill for these cases, but apparently the mods like it this way. A good comment explaining that the comment is obsolete obviates the need to read to context and is more likely to get approved.
Personally, I'd leave it to the commenting user in most cases. Once the post is improved the comment can still have a use if another user wants to add a counterpoint. In many cases, users commenting to improve a post are vigilant enough to remove these comments if they feel they served their purpose.