Enquobahrie Daniel A, Moore Amy, Muhie Seid, Tadesse Mahlet G, Lin Shili, Williams Michelle A
Center for Perinatal Studies, Swedish Medical Center, Seattle, WA, USA Department of Epidemiology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
Department of Epidemiology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Reprod Sci. 2015 Jul;22(7):904-10. doi: 10.1177/1933719115570903. Epub 2015 Feb 11.
Repeat pregnancies with different perinatal outcomes minimize underlying maternal genetic diversity and provide unique opportunities to investigate nongenetic risk factors and epigenetic mechanisms of pregnancy complications. We investigated gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM)-related differential DNA methylation in early pregnancy peripheral blood samples collected from women who had a change in GDM status in repeat pregnancies. Six study participants were randomly selected from among women who had 2 consecutive pregnancies, only 1 of which was complicated by GDM (case pregnancy) and the other was not (control pregnancy). Epigenome-wide DNA methylation was profiled using Illumina HumanMethylation 27 BeadChips. Differential Identification using Mixture Ensemble and false discovery rate (<10%) cutoffs were used to identify differentially methylated targets between the 2 pregnancies of each participant. Overall, 27 target sites, 17 hypomethylated (fold change [FC] range: 0.77-0.99) and 10 hypermethylated (FC range: 1.01-1.09), were differentially methylated between GDM and control pregnancies among 5 or more study participants. Novel genes were related to identified hypomethylated (such as NDUFC1, HAPLN3, HHLA3, and RHOG) or hypermethylated sites (such as SEP11, ZAR1, and DDR). Genes related to identified sites participated in cell morphology, cellular assembly, cellular organization, cellular compromise, and cell cycle. Our findings support early pregnancy peripheral blood DNA methylation differences in repeat pregnancies with change in GDM status. Similar, larger, and repeat pregnancy studies can enhance biomarker discovery and mechanistic studies of GDM.
具有不同围产期结局的重复妊娠可将潜在的母体遗传多样性降至最低,并为研究妊娠并发症的非遗传风险因素和表观遗传机制提供独特的机会。我们调查了从重复妊娠中患有妊娠期糖尿病(GDM)状态发生变化的女性收集的孕早期外周血样本中与GDM相关的差异DNA甲基化情况。从有连续两次妊娠的女性中随机选择6名研究参与者,其中只有1次妊娠合并GDM(病例妊娠),另1次未合并(对照妊娠)。使用Illumina HumanMethylation 27 BeadChips对全基因组DNA甲基化进行分析。使用混合总体差异鉴定和错误发现率(<10%)临界值来识别每个参与者两次妊娠之间的差异甲基化靶点。总体而言,在5名或更多研究参与者中,GDM妊娠和对照妊娠之间有27个靶点位点存在差异甲基化,其中17个低甲基化(倍数变化[FC]范围:0.77 - 0.99),10个高甲基化(FC范围:1.01 - 1.09)。新基因与已鉴定的低甲基化位点(如NDUFC1、HAPLN3、HHLA3和RHOG)或高甲基化位点(如SEP11、ZAR1和DDR)相关。与已鉴定位点相关的基因参与细胞形态、细胞组装、细胞组织、细胞损伤和细胞周期。我们的研究结果支持了GDM状态发生变化的重复妊娠中孕早期外周血DNA甲基化存在差异。类似的、规模更大的重复妊娠研究可以加强GDM的生物标志物发现和机制研究。