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Pet keeping and tobacco exposure influence CD14 methylation in childhood.

Authors :
Munthe-Kaas, Monica Cheng
Bertelsen, Randi J.
Torjussen, Tale Mæhre
Hjorthaug, Hanne Sagsveen
Undlien, Dag E.
Lyle, Robert
Gervin, Kristina
Granum, Berit
Mowinckel, Petter
Carlsen, Kai Håkon
Carlsen, Karin C. Lødrup
Source :
Pediatric Allergy & Immunology. Dec2012, Vol. 23 Issue 8, p747-754. 8p. 2 Diagrams, 3 Charts, 1 Graph.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Background Several CD14 gene-environment interactions in relation to the development of allergic diseases have been reported, but the underlying biological mechanisms are unclear. We recently showed that CD14 methylation increased during childhood, parallelling a decreased impact of CD14 polymorphisms on soluble CD14 levels. Here, we aim to explore whether environmental stimuli during childhood affects CD14 methylation, thereby providing a biological mechanism through which environment may modulate genetic effect. Methods CD14 methylation levels were quantified in 157 children from the prospective Environment and Childhood Asthma birth cohort at ages 2 and 10. Associations between CD14 methylation levels and house dust levels of endotoxin, β(1,3)-glucans (at 2 yr only), allergens (dog, cat, and house dust mite), pet keeping and tobacco smoke exposure ( TSE; questionnaire data) at 2 and 10 yr were explored. Results Children in homes without pets had larger increases in CD14 methylation through childhood (2-10 yr) compared with children with pets (2.1% increase (p = 0.003) vs. 0.4% decrease (n.s.), global p = 0.04). At 10 yr of age, lower CD14 methylation values were found in children with pets compared with children without pets at both 2 and 10 yr (5.4% vs. 7.5% [p = 0.02]). A similar trend was detected for TSE; children not exposed show larger increases in CD14 methylation, most pronounced in school-age girls exposed vs. not exposed to tobacco (5.5% vs. 7.5% methylation, p = 0.037). Conclusion Pet keeping and TSE appears to limit increase in CD14 methylation from 2 to 10 yr of age. This may partly explain the diverging CD14 allele associations with allergic diseases detected in different environments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09056157
Volume :
23
Issue :
8
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Pediatric Allergy & Immunology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
83731204
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/pai.12021