1. Smoking and blood DNA methylation: an epigenome-wide association study and assessment of reversibility
- Author
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Pierre-Antoine Dugué, Chol-Hee Jung, Jihoon E Joo, Xiaochuan Wang, Ee Ming Wong, Enes Makalic, Daniel F Schmidt, Laura Baglietto, Gianluca Severi, Melissa C Southey, Dallas R English, Graham G Giles, and Roger L Milne
- Subjects
epigenome-wide association study ,dna methylation ,smoking ,blood ,reversibility ,replication ,Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
We conducted a genome-wide association study of blood DNA methylation and smoking, attempted replication of previously discovered associations, and assessed the reversibility of smoking-associated methylation changes. DNA methylation was measured in baseline peripheral blood samples for 5,044 participants in the Melbourne Collaborative Cohort Study. For 1,032 participants, these measures were repeated using blood samples collected at follow-up, a median of 11 years later. A cross-sectional analysis of the association between smoking and DNA methylation and a longitudinal analysis of changes in smoking status and changes in DNA methylation were conducted. We used our cross-sectional analysis to replicate previously reported associations for current (N = 3,327) and former (N = 172) smoking. A comprehensive smoking index accounting for the biological half-life of smoking compounds and several aspects of smoking history was constructed to assess the reversibility of smoking-induced methylation changes. This measure of lifetime exposure to smoking allowed us to detect more associations than comparing current with never smokers. We identified 4,496 cross-sectional associations at P
- Published
- 2020
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