Vanderlinden Lauren A, Wong Ellen, Johnson Randi K, Carry Patrick, Dong Fran, Kechris Katerina, Rewers Marian, Norris Jill M
Division of Rheumatology, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, CO.
Department of Epidemiology, Colorado School of Public Health, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, CO.
Diabetes Care. 2025 Sep 1;48(9):1628-1636. doi: 10.2337/dc25-0330.
Multiple studies have reported an inverse association between self-reported smoking during pregnancy and offspring type 1 diabetes (T1D) risk. We investigated the association between DNA methylation (DNAm) smoke exposure scores, parental self-reported smoking, and islet autoimmunity (IA) and T1D risk in children at high risk of T1D.
We used longitudinal data from the Diabetes Autoimmunity Study in the Young cohort, including 205 IA case and 206 control participants (87 and 88 were T1D case and control participants, respectively), matched by age, race/ethnicity, and sample availability. DNAm profiles were obtained from cord or peripheral blood using the Infinium Human Methylation 450K or EPIC BeadChip. Three published DNAm smoking scores were calculated at every time point. To estimate in utero smoke exposure, participant-specific intercepts were derived from mixed-effects models of longitudinal DNAm scores. These intercepts strongly correlated with cord blood scores (r = 0.85-0.95; n = 179), indicating their utility as proxies for in utero smoke exposure. Associations with IA/T1D were evaluated using logistic regression, adjusting for HLA-DR3/4, first-degree relative status, and sex.
Multivariable models showed both maternally reported smoking during pregnancy and higher DNAm smoking scores to be associated with lower risk of IA and T1D. Maternal smoking showed a strong inverse association with IA (odds ratio [OR] 0.24; 95% CI 0.10-0.54). Rauschert and McCartney DNAm scores showed consistent inverse associations with both outcomes (OR 0.65-0.83 for SD increase).
Our study supports existing literature indicating in utero smoke exposure is associated with reduced IA and T1D risk. Further research is essential to uncover the underlying mechanisms.
多项研究报告称,孕期自我报告的吸烟情况与后代1型糖尿病(T1D)风险呈负相关。我们调查了DNA甲基化(DNAm)烟雾暴露评分、父母自我报告的吸烟情况与T1D高风险儿童的胰岛自身免疫(IA)及T1D风险之间的关联。
我们使用了青少年糖尿病自身免疫研究队列的纵向数据,包括205例IA病例和206例对照参与者(分别有87例和88例为T1D病例和对照参与者),根据年龄、种族/族裔和样本可用性进行匹配。使用Infinium Human Methylation 450K或EPIC BeadChip从脐带血或外周血中获取DNAm图谱。在每个时间点计算三个已发表的DNAm吸烟评分。为了估计子宫内烟雾暴露情况,从纵向DNAm评分的混合效应模型中得出参与者特定的截距。这些截距与脐带血评分高度相关(r = 0.85 - 0.95;n = 179),表明它们可作为子宫内烟雾暴露的替代指标。使用逻辑回归评估与IA/T1D的关联,并对HLA - DR3/4、一级亲属状态和性别进行调整。
多变量模型显示,孕期母亲报告的吸烟情况以及较高的DNAm吸烟评分均与较低的IA和T1D风险相关。母亲吸烟与IA呈强烈负相关(优势比[OR] 0.24;95%可信区间0.10 - 0.54)。Rauschert和McCartney DNAm评分与这两个结果均呈现一致的负相关(标准差每增加一个单位,OR为0.65 - 0.83)。
我们的研究支持现有文献表明子宫内烟雾暴露与降低IA和T1D风险相关。进一步的研究对于揭示潜在机制至关重要。