Tobi Elmar W, Slieker Roderick C, Stein Aryeh D, Suchiman H Eka D, Slagboom P Eline, van Zwet Erik W, Heijmans Bastiaan T, Lumey L H
Molecular Epidemiology, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, The Netherlands.
Hubert Department of Global Health, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia USA.
Int J Epidemiol. 2015 Aug;44(4):1211-23. doi: 10.1093/ije/dyv043. Epub 2015 May 5.
The manipulation of pregnancy diets in animals can lead to changes in DNA methylation with phenotypic consequences in the offspring. Human studies have concentrated on the effects of nutrition during early gestation. Lacking in humans is an epigenome-wide association study of DNA methylation in relation to perturbations in nutrition across all gestation periods.
We used the quasi-experimental setting of the Dutch famine of 1944-45 to evaluate the impact of famine exposure during specific 10-week gestation periods, or during any time in gestation, on genome-wide DNA methylation levels at age ∼ 59 years. In addition, we evaluated the impact of exposure during a shorter pre- and post-conception period. DNA methylation was assessed using the Illumina 450k array in whole blood among 422 individuals with prenatal famine exposure and 463 time- or sibling-controls without prenatal famine exposure.
Famine exposure during gestation weeks 1-10, but not weeks 11-20, 21-30 or 31-delivery, was associated with an increase in DNA methylation of CpG dinucleotides cg20823026 (FAM150B), cg10354880 (SLC38A2) and cg27370573 (PPAP2C) and a decrease of cg11496778 (OSBPL5/MRGPRG) (P < 5.9 × 10(-7), PFDR < 0.031). There was an increase in methylation of TACC1 and ZNF385A after exposure during any time in gestation (P < 2.0 × 10(-7), PFDR = 0.034) and a decrease of cg23989336 (TMEM105) after exposure around conception. These changes represent a shift of 0.3-0.6 standard deviations and are linked to genes involved in growth, development and metabolism.
Early gestation, and not mid or late gestation, is identified as a critical time-period for adult DNA methylation changes in whole blood after prenatal exposure to famine.
在动物实验中,改变孕期饮食可导致DNA甲基化发生变化,并对后代产生表型影响。人类研究主要集中在妊娠早期营养的影响。目前尚缺乏一项针对孕期各个阶段营养干扰与DNA甲基化的全表观基因组关联研究。
我们利用1944 - 1945年荷兰饥荒这一准实验环境,评估在特定的10周孕期或孕期任何时间遭受饥荒,对约59岁时全基因组DNA甲基化水平的影响。此外,我们还评估了在较短的孕前和孕后时期暴露的影响。使用Illumina 450k芯片对422名有产前饥荒暴露经历的个体以及463名无产前饥荒暴露经历的时间或同胞对照个体的全血进行DNA甲基化评估。
孕期第1 - 10周而非第11 - 20周、第21 - 30周或第31周 - 分娩期间遭受饥荒,与CpG二核苷酸cg20823026(FAM150B)、cg10354880(SLC38A2)和cg27370573(PPAP2C)的DNA甲基化增加以及cg11496778(OSBPL5/MRGPRG)的甲基化减少有关(P < 5.9×10⁻⁷,PFDR < 0.031)。孕期任何时间暴露后,TACC1和ZNF385A的甲基化增加(P < 2.0×10⁻⁷,PFDR = 0.034),受孕前后暴露后cg23989336(TMEM105)的甲基化减少。这些变化代表了0.3 - 0.6个标准差的偏移,并且与参与生长、发育和代谢的基因相关。
孕期早期而非中期或晚期,被确定为产前暴露于饥荒后成人全血DNA甲基化变化的关键时期。