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DNA Methylation in Newborns and Maternal Smoking in Pregnancy: Genome-wide Consortium Meta-analysis

Authors :
Joubert, Bonnie R
Felix, Janine F
Yousefi, Paul
Bakulski, Kelly M
Just, Allan C
Breton, Carrie
Reese, Sarah E
Markunas, Christina A
Richmond, Rebecca C
Xu, Cheng-Jian
Küpers, Leanne K
Oh, Sam S
Hoyo, Cathrine
Gruzieva, Olena
Söderhäll, Cilla
Salas, Lucas A
Baïz, Nour
Zhang, Hongmei
Lepeule, Johanna
Ruiz, Carlos
Ligthart, Symen
Wang, Tianyuan
Taylor, Jack A
Duijts, Liesbeth
Sharp, Gemma C
Jankipersadsing, Soesma A
Nilsen, Roy M
Vaez, Ahmad
Fallin, M Daniele
Hu, Donglei
Litonjua, Augusto A
Fuemmeler, Bernard F
Huen, Karen
Kere, Juha
Kull, Inger
Munthe-Kaas, Monica Cheng
Gehring, Ulrike
Bustamante, Mariona
Saurel-Coubizolles, Marie José
Quraishi, Bilal M
Ren, Jie
Tost, Jörg
Gonzalez, Juan R
Peters, Marjolein J
Håberg, Siri E
Xu, Zongli
van Meurs, Joyce B
Gaunt, Tom R
Kerkhof, Marjan
Corpeleijn, Eva
Feinberg, Andrew P
Eng, Celeste
Baccarelli, Andrea A
Benjamin Neelon, Sara E
Bradman, Asa
Merid, Simon Kebede
Bergström, Anna
Herceg, Zdenko
Hernandez-Vargas, Hector
Brunekreef, Bert
Pinart, Mariona
Heude, Barbara
Ewart, Susan
Yao, Jin
Lemonnier, Nathanaël
Franco, Oscar H
Wu, Michael C
Hofman, Albert
McArdle, Wendy
Van der Vlies, Pieter
Falahi, Fahimeh
Gillman, Matthew W
Barcellos, Lisa F
Kumar, Ashish
Wickman, Magnus
Guerra, Stefano
Charles, Marie-Aline
Holloway, John
Auffray, Charles
Tiemeier, Henning W
Smith, George Davey
Postma, Dirkje
Hivert, Marie-France
Eskenazi, Brenda
Vrijheid, Martine
Arshad, Hasan
Antó, Josep M
Dehghan, Abbas
Karmaus, Wilfried
Annesi-Maesano, Isabella
Sunyer, Jordi
Ghantous, Akram
Pershagen, Göran
Holland, Nina
Murphy, Susan K
DeMeo, Dawn L
Burchard, Esteban G
Ladd-Acosta, Christine
Snieder, Harold
Nystad, Wenche
Koppelman, Gerard H
Relton, Caroline L
Jaddoe, Vincent W V
Wilcox, Allen
Melén, Erik
London, Stephanie J
Joubert, Bonnie R
Felix, Janine F
Yousefi, Paul
Bakulski, Kelly M
Just, Allan C
Breton, Carrie
Reese, Sarah E
Markunas, Christina A
Richmond, Rebecca C
Xu, Cheng-Jian
Küpers, Leanne K
Oh, Sam S
Hoyo, Cathrine
Gruzieva, Olena
Söderhäll, Cilla
Salas, Lucas A
Baïz, Nour
Zhang, Hongmei
Lepeule, Johanna
Ruiz, Carlos
Ligthart, Symen
Wang, Tianyuan
Taylor, Jack A
Duijts, Liesbeth
Sharp, Gemma C
Jankipersadsing, Soesma A
Nilsen, Roy M
Vaez, Ahmad
Fallin, M Daniele
Hu, Donglei
Litonjua, Augusto A
Fuemmeler, Bernard F
Huen, Karen
Kere, Juha
Kull, Inger
Munthe-Kaas, Monica Cheng
Gehring, Ulrike
Bustamante, Mariona
Saurel-Coubizolles, Marie José
Quraishi, Bilal M
Ren, Jie
Tost, Jörg
Gonzalez, Juan R
Peters, Marjolein J
Håberg, Siri E
Xu, Zongli
van Meurs, Joyce B
Gaunt, Tom R
Kerkhof, Marjan
Corpeleijn, Eva
Feinberg, Andrew P
Eng, Celeste
Baccarelli, Andrea A
Benjamin Neelon, Sara E
Bradman, Asa
Merid, Simon Kebede
Bergström, Anna
Herceg, Zdenko
Hernandez-Vargas, Hector
Brunekreef, Bert
Pinart, Mariona
Heude, Barbara
Ewart, Susan
Yao, Jin
Lemonnier, Nathanaël
Franco, Oscar H
Wu, Michael C
Hofman, Albert
McArdle, Wendy
Van der Vlies, Pieter
Falahi, Fahimeh
Gillman, Matthew W
Barcellos, Lisa F
Kumar, Ashish
Wickman, Magnus
Guerra, Stefano
Charles, Marie-Aline
Holloway, John
Auffray, Charles
Tiemeier, Henning W
Smith, George Davey
Postma, Dirkje
Hivert, Marie-France
Eskenazi, Brenda
Vrijheid, Martine
Arshad, Hasan
Antó, Josep M
Dehghan, Abbas
Karmaus, Wilfried
Annesi-Maesano, Isabella
Sunyer, Jordi
Ghantous, Akram
Pershagen, Göran
Holland, Nina
Murphy, Susan K
DeMeo, Dawn L
Burchard, Esteban G
Ladd-Acosta, Christine
Snieder, Harold
Nystad, Wenche
Koppelman, Gerard H
Relton, Caroline L
Jaddoe, Vincent W V
Wilcox, Allen
Melén, Erik
London, Stephanie J
Source :
American Journal of Human Genetics vol.98 (2016) date: 2016-04-06 nr.4 p.680-96 [ISSN 0002-9297]
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Epigenetic modifications, including DNA methylation, represent a potential mechanism for environmental impacts on human disease. Maternal smoking in pregnancy remains an important public health problem that impacts child health in a myriad of ways and has potential lifelong consequences. The mechanisms are largely unknown, but epigenetics most likely plays a role. We formed the Pregnancy And Childhood Epigenetics (PACE) consortium and meta-analyzed, across 13 cohorts (n = 6,685), the association between maternal smoking in pregnancy and newborn blood DNA methylation at over 450,000 CpG sites (CpGs) by using the Illumina 450K BeadChip. Over 6,000 CpGs were differentially methylated in relation to maternal smoking at genome-wide statistical significance (false discovery rate, 5%), including 2,965 CpGs corresponding to 2,017 genes not previously related to smoking and methylation in either newborns or adults. Several genes are relevant to diseases that can be caused by maternal smoking (e.g., orofacial clefts and asthma) or adult smoking (e.g., certain cancers). A number of differentially methylated CpGs were associated with gene expression. We observed enrichment in pathways and processes critical to development. In older children (5 cohorts, n = 3,187), 100% of CpGs gave at least nominal levels of significance, far more than expected by chance (p value < 2.2 × 10(-16)). Results were robust to different normalization methods used across studies and cell type adjustment. In this large scale meta-analysis of methylation data, we identified numerous loci involved in response to maternal smoking in pregnancy with persistence into later childhood and provide insights into mechanisms underlying effects of this important exposure.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
American Journal of Human Genetics vol.98 (2016) date: 2016-04-06 nr.4 p.680-96 [ISSN 0002-9297]
Notes :
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2016.02.019, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1445797792
Document Type :
Electronic Resource