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Genome-wide analysis of DNA methylation and cigarette smoking in a Chinese population

Authors :
Zhu, Xiaoyan
Li, Jun
Deng, Siyun
Yu, Kuai
Liu, Xuezhen
Deng, Qifei
Sun, Huizhen
Zhang, Xiaomin
He, Meian
Guo, Huan
Chen, Weihong
Yuan, Jing
Zhang, Bing
Kuang, Dan
He, Xiaosheng
Bai, Yansen
Han, Xu
Liu, Bing
Li, Xiaoliang
Yang, Liangle
Jiang, Haijing
Zhang, Yizhi
Hu, Jie
Cheng, Longxian
Luo, Xiaoting
Mei, Wenhua
Zhou, Zhiming
Sun, Shunchang
Zhang, Liyun
Liu, Chuanyao
Guo, Yanjun
Hu, Frank B.
Liang, Liming
Wu, Tangchun
Source :
Environmental Health Perspectives. July 1, 2016, 966
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Introduction Tobacco kills nearly 6 million people per year on account of direct tobacco use or indirect smoke exposure [World Health Organization (WHO) 2014]. Cigarette smoking, the primary method of [...]<br />BACKGROUND: Smoking is a risk factor for many human diseases. DNA methylation has been related to smoking, but genome-wide methylation data for smoking in Chinese populations is limited. OBJECTIVES: We aimed to investigate epigenome-wide methylation in relation to smoking in a Chinese population. METHODS: We measured the methylation levels at > 485,000 CpG sites (CpGs) in DNA from leukocytes using a methylation array and conducted a genome-wide meta-analysis of DNA methylation and smoking in a total of 596 Chinese participants. We further evaluated the associations of smoking-related CpGs with internal polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) biomarkers and their correlations with the expression of corresponding genes. RESULTS: We identified 318 CpGs whose methylation levels were associated with smoking at a genome-wide significance level (false discovery rate < 0.05), among which 161 CpGs annotated to 123 genes were not associated with smoking in recent studies of Europeans and African Americans. Of these smoking-related CpGs, methylation levels at 80 CpGs showed significant correlations with the expression of corresponding genes (including RUNX3, IL6R, PTAFR, ANKRD11, CEP135 and CDH23), and methylation at 15 CpGs was significantly associated with urinary 2-hydroxynaphthalene, the most representative internal monohydroxy-PAH biomarker for smoking. CONCLUSION: We identified DNA methylation markers associated with smoking in a Chinese population, including some markers that were also correlated with gene expression. Exposure to naphthalene, a byproduct of tobacco smoke, may contribute to smoking-related methylation. http://dx.doi.org/10.1289/ehp.1509834

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00916765
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Environmental Health Perspectives
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.457693817
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1289/ehp.1509834