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Environment‐induced epigenetic reprogramming in genomic regulatory elements in smoking mothers and their children

Authors :
Tobias Bauer
Saskia Trump
Naveed Ishaque
Loreen Thürmann
Lei Gu
Mario Bauer
Matthias Bieg
Zuguang Gu
Dieter Weichenhan
Jan‐Philipp Mallm
Stefan Röder
Gunda Herberth
Eiko Takada
Oliver Mücke
Marcus Winter
Kristin M Junge
Konrad Grützmann
Ulrike Rolle‐Kampczyk
Qi Wang
Christian Lawerenz
Michael Borte
Tobias Polte
Matthias Schlesner
Michaela Schanne
Stefan Wiemann
Christina Geörg
Hendrik G Stunnenberg
Christoph Plass
Karsten Rippe
Junichiro Mizuguchi
Carl Herrmann
Roland Eils
Irina Lehmann
Source :
Molecular Systems Biology, Vol 12, Iss 3, Pp 1-18 (2016)
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Springer Nature, 2016.

Abstract

Abstract Epigenetic mechanisms have emerged as links between prenatal environmental exposure and disease risk later in life. Here, we studied epigenetic changes associated with maternal smoking at base pair resolution by mapping DNA methylation, histone modifications, and transcription in expectant mothers and their newborn children. We found extensive global differential methylation and carefully evaluated these changes to separate environment associated from genotype‐related DNA methylation changes. Differential methylation is enriched in enhancer elements and targets in particular “commuting” enhancers having multiple, regulatory interactions with distal genes. Longitudinal whole‐genome bisulfite sequencing revealed that DNA methylation changes associated with maternal smoking persist over years of life. Particularly in children prenatal environmental exposure leads to chromatin transitions into a hyperactive state. Combined DNA methylation, histone modification, and gene expression analyses indicate that differential methylation in enhancer regions is more often functionally translated than methylation changes in promoters or non‐regulatory elements. Finally, we show that epigenetic deregulation of a commuting enhancer targeting c‐Jun N‐terminal kinase 2 (JNK2) is linked to impaired lung function in early childhood.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17444292
Volume :
12
Issue :
3
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Molecular Systems Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.38bc331fff1649fb868593940225153e
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.15252/msb.20156520