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DNA methylation in childhood asthma : an epigenome-wide meta-analysis
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 4482101
Author(s) Xu, CJ.; Sönderhäll, C.; Bustamante, M.; Baiz, N.; Gruzieva, O.; Gehring, U.; Mason, D.; Chatzi, L.; Basterrechea, M.; Llop, S.; Torrent, M.; Forastiere, F.; Fantini, MP.; Carlson, KCL.; Haahtela, T.; Morin, A.; Kerkhof, M.; Merid, SK.; Van Riijkom, B.; Jankipersadsing, SA.; Jan Bonder, M.; Ballereau, S.; Vermeulen, CJ.; Aguirre-Gamboa, R.; De Jongste, JC.; Smit, HA.; Kumar, A.; Pershagen, G.; Guerra, S.; Garcia Aymerich, J.; Greco, D.; Reinnius, L.; MsEachan, RRC.; Azad, R.; Hovland, V.; Mowinckel, P.; Alenius, H.; Fyhrquist, N.; Lemonnier, N.; Pellet, J.; Auffray, C.; Van der Vlies, P.; Van Diemen, CC.; Li, Y.; Wijmenga, C.; Netea, MG.; Moffatt, MF.; Cookson, Womc.; Anto, JM.; Bousquet, J.; Laatikainen, T.; Laprise, C.; Carlson, KH.; Gori, D.; Porta, D.; Iñiguez, C.; Bilbao, JR.; Kogevinas, M.; Wright, J.; Brunekreef, B.; Kere, J.; Nawijn, MC.; Annesi-Maesano, I.; Sunyer, J.; Melén, E.; Koppelman, G. H.
Author(s) at UniBasel Kumar, Ashish
Year 2018
Title DNA methylation in childhood asthma : an epigenome-wide meta-analysis
Journal The lancet Respiratory medicine
Volume 6
Number 5
Pages / Article-Number 379-388
Mesh terms Asthma, genetics; Child; Child, Preschool; CpG Islands; DNA, blood; DNA Methylation; Eosinophils, immunology; Epigenesis, Genetic; Female; Genome-Wide Association Study; Humans; Male; T-Lymphocytes, Cytotoxic
Abstract BACKGROUND: DNA methylation profiles associated with childhood asthma might provide novel insights into disease pathogenesis. We did an epigenome-wide association study to assess methylation profiles associated with childhood asthma. METHODS: We did a large-scale epigenome-wide association study (EWAS) within the Mechanisms of the Development of ALLergy (MeDALL) project. We examined epigenome-wide methylation using Illumina Infinium Human Methylation450 BeadChips (450K) in whole blood in 207 children with asthma and 610 controls at age 4-5 years, and 185 children with asthma and 546 controls at age 8 years using a cross-sectional case-control design. After identification of differentially methylated CpG sites in the discovery analysis, we did a validation study in children (4-16 years; 247 cases and 2949 controls) from six additional European cohorts and meta-analysed the results. We next investigated whether replicated CpG sites in cord blood predict later asthma in 1316 children. We subsequently investigated cell-type-specific methylation of the identified CpG sites in eosinophils and respiratory epithelial cells and their related gene-expression signatures. We studied cell-type specificity of the asthma association of the replicated CpG sites in 455 respiratory epithelial cell samples, collected by nasal brushing of 16-year-old children as well as in DNA isolated from blood eosinophils (16 with asthma, eight controls [age 2-56 years]) and compared this with whole-blood DNA samples of 74 individuals with asthma and 93 controls (age 1-79 years). Whole-blood transcriptional profiles associated with replicated CpG sites were annotated using RNA-seq data of subsets of peripheral blood mononuclear cells sorted by fluorescence-activated cell sorting. FINDINGS: 27 methylated CpG sites were identified in the discovery analysis. 14 of these CpG sites were replicated and passed genome-wide significance (p<1·14 × 10-7) after meta-analysis. Consistently lower methylation levels were observed at all associated loci across childhood from age 4 to 16 years in participants with asthma, but not in cord blood at birth. All 14 CpG sites were significantly associated with asthma in the second replication study using whole-blood DNA, and were strongly associated with asthma in purified eosinophils. Whole-blood transcriptional signatures associated with these CpG sites indicated increased activation of eosinophils, effector and memory CD8 T cells and natural killer cells, and reduced number of naive T cells. Five of the 14 CpG sites were associated with asthma in respiratory epithelial cells, indicating cross-tissue epigenetic effects. INTERPRETATION: Reduced whole-blood DNA methylation at 14 CpG sites acquired after birth was strongly associated with childhood asthma. These CpG sites and their associated transcriptional profiles indicate activation of eosinophils and cytotoxic T cells in childhood asthma. Our findings merit further investigations of the role of epigenetics in a clinical context. FUNDING: EU and the Seventh Framework Programme (the MeDALL project).
Publisher Elsevier
ISSN/ISBN 2213-2600
edoc-URL https://edoc.unibas.ch/69273/
Full Text on edoc No
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.1016/S2213-2600(18)30052-3
PubMed ID http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29496485
ISI-Number WOS:000430535200023
Document type (ISI) Journal Article
 
   

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03/05/2024