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Acceleration of age-associated methylation patterns in HIV-1-infected adults

Authors :
Janet S. Sinsheimer
Eric Vilain
Austin Quach
Lance E. Hultin
Ruth M. Baxter
Steve Horvath
Tammy M. Rickabaugh
Mary E. Sehl
Patricia M. Hultin
Beth D. Jamieson
Otoniel Martinez-Maza
Conneely, Karen
Source :
PLoS ONE, PloS one, vol 10, iss 3, PLoS ONE, Vol 10, Iss 3, p e0119201 (2015), Rickabaugh, TM; Baxter, RM; Sehl, M; Sinsheimer, JS; Hultin, PM; Hultin, LE; et al.(2015). Acceleration of age-associated methylation patterns in HIV-1-infected adults. PLoS ONE, 10(3). doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0119201. UCLA: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/7vr630zs
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

© 2015 Rickabaugh et al. Patients with treated HIV-1-infection experience earlier occurrence of aging-associated diseases, raising speculation that HIV-1-infection, or antiretroviral treatment, may accelerate aging. We recently described an age-related co-methylation module comprised of hundreds of CpGs; however, it is unknown whether aging and HIV-1-infection exert negative health effects through similar, or disparate, mechanisms. We investigated whether HIV-1-infection would induce age-associated methylation changes. We evaluated DNA methylation levels at >450,000 CpG sites in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of young (20-35) and older (36-56) adults in two separate groups of participants. Each age group for each data set consisted of 12 HIV-1-infected and 12 age-matched HIV-1-uninfected samples for a total of 96 samples. The effects of age and HIV-1 infection on methylation at each CpG revealed a strong correlation of 0.49, p-200 and 0.47, p-200. Weighted gene correlation network analysis (WGCNA) identified 17 co-methylation modules; module 3 (ME3) was significantly correlated with age (cor=0.70) and HIV-1 status (cor=0.31). Older HIV-1+ individuals had a greater number of hypermethylated CpGs across ME3 (p=0.015). In a multivariate model, ME3 was significantly associated with age and HIV status (Data set 1: βage= 0.007088, p=2.08 × 10-9; βHIV= 0.099574, p=0.0011; Data set 2: βage= 0.008762, p=1.27× 10-5; βHIV= 0.128649, p= 0.0001). Using this model, we estimate that HIV-1 infection accelerates age-related methylation by approximately 13.7 years in data set 1 and 14.7 years in data set 2. The genes related to CpGs in ME3 are enriched for polycomb group target genes known to be involved in cell renewal and aging. The overlap between ME3 and an aging methylation module found in solid tissues is also highly significant (Fisher-exact p=5.6 × 10-6, odds ratio=1.91). These data demonstrate that HIV-1 infection is associated with methylation patterns that are similar to age-associated patterns and suggest that general aging and HIV-1 related aging work through some common cellular and molecular mechanisms. These results are an important first step for finding potential therapeutic targets and novel clinical approaches to mitigate the detrimental effects of both HIV-1-infection and aging.

Details

ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
10
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PloS one
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....596c6f91cb4cebfc19ab58918bcf31dd