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DNA methylation and exposure to ambient air pollution in two prospective cohorts

Authors :
Michelle Plusquin
Florence Guida
Silvia Polidoro
Roel Vermeulen
Ole Raaschou-Nielsen
Gianluca Campanella
Gerard Hoek
Soterios A. Kyrtopoulos
Panagiotis Georgiadis
Alessio Naccarati
Carlotta Sacerdote
Vittorio Krogh
H. Bas Bueno-de-Mesquita
W.M. Monique Verschuren
Sergi Sayols-Baixeras
Tommaso Panni
Annette Peters
Dennie G.A.J. Hebels
Jos Kleinjans
Paolo Vineis
Marc Chadeau-Hyam
Source :
Environment International, Vol 108, Iss , Pp 127-136 (2017)
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2017.

Abstract

Long-term exposure to air pollution has been associated with several adverse health effects including cardiovascular, respiratory diseases and cancers. However, underlying molecular alterations remain to be further investigated. The aim of this study is to investigate the effects of long-term exposure to air pollutants on (a) average DNA methylation at functional regions and, (b) individual differentially methylated CpG sites. An assumption is that omic measurements, including the methylome, are more sensitive to low doses than hard health outcomes.This study included blood-derived DNA methylation (Illumina-HM450 methylation) for 454 Italian and 159 Dutch participants from the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC). Long-term air pollution exposure levels, including NO2, NOx, PM2.5, PMcoarse, PM10, PM2.5 absorbance (soot) were estimated using models developed within the ESCAPE project, and back-extrapolated to the time of sampling when possible. We meta-analysed the associations between the air pollutants and global DNA methylation, methylation in functional regions and epigenome-wide methylation. CpG sites found differentially methylated with air pollution were further investigated for functional interpretation in an independent population (EnviroGenoMarkers project), where (N=613) participants had both methylation and gene expression data available.Exposure to NO2 was associated with a significant global somatic hypomethylation (p-value=0.014). Hypomethylation of CpG island's shores and shelves and gene bodies was significantly associated with higher exposures to NO2 and NOx. Meta-analysing the epigenome-wide findings of the 2 cohorts did not show genome-wide significant associations at single CpG site level. However, several significant CpG were found if the analyses were separated by countries. By regressing gene expression levels against methylation levels of the exposure-related CpG sites, we identified several significant CpG-transcript pairs and highlighted 5 enriched pathways for NO2 and 9 for NOx mainly related to the immune system and its regulation.Our findings support results on global hypomethylation associated with air pollution, and suggest that the shores and shelves of CpG islands and gene bodies are mostly affected by higher exposure to NO2 and NOx. Functional differences in the immune system were suggested by transcriptome analyses. Keywords: Air pollution, Epigenome-wide DNA methylation, Illumina 450k human methylation array, Particulate matter, NOx, EPIC

Subjects

Subjects :
Environmental sciences
GE1-350

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01604120
Volume :
108
Issue :
127-136
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Environment International
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.91f162c570741688c62155900a9b64e
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2017.08.006