1. Sex differences in DNA methylation variations according to ART conception-evidence from the Norwegian mother, father, and child cohort study.
- Author
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Kristjansson D, Lee Y, Page CM, Gjessing H, Magnus MC, Jugessur A, Lyle R, and Håberg SE
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Infant, Newborn, Cohort Studies, Norway, CpG Islands, Fetal Blood metabolism, Fertilization genetics, Sex Characteristics, Adult, Sex Factors, Epigenesis, Genetic, Pregnancy, DNA Methylation, Reproductive Techniques, Assisted
- Abstract
Previous studies have shown cord-blood DNA methylation differences in newborns conceived using assisted reproductive technologies (ART) compared to those conceived naturally. However, whether these ART-related DNA methylation differences vary with children's sex is unknown. We hypothesize that the DNA methylation differences in cord blood between ART-conceived and naturally conceived newborns also varies by the sex of the child, with distinct patterns of differential methylation present in males and females. We investigated sex differences in cord-blood DNA methylation variation according to conception by ART using the Illumina MethylationEPIC platform, comparing 456 ART-conceived versus 507 naturally-conceived girls, and 503 ART-conceived and 473 naturally-conceived boys. We identified 37 differentially methylated CpGs according to ART-conception among girls, and 70 differentially methylated CpGs according to ART-conception among boys, when we used a 1% false discovery rate to account for multiple testing. Ten CpGs were differentially methylated according to conception by ART in both sexes. Among the genes that were associated with these CpGs, we found the BRCA1; NBR2 gene (two CpGs) was hypermethylated in girls while the APC2 (two CpGs) and NECAB3;ACTL10, (four CpGs) related to cellular signaling were hypomethylated in boys. These findings confirm the presence of sex-specific epigenetic differences, illustrating the nuanced impact of ART on the fetal epigenome. There is a need for further explorations into the implications for sex-specific developmental trajectories and health outcomes in ART-conceived children., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
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