| Literature DB >> 25484923 |
Juan E Castillo-Fernandez1, Tim D Spector1, Jordana T Bell1.
Abstract
Monozygotic (MZ) twins share nearly all of their genetic variants and many similar environments before and after birth. However, they can also show phenotypic discordance for a wide range of traits. Differences at the epigenetic level may account for such discordances. It is well established that epigenetic states can contribute to phenotypic variation, including disease. Epigenetic states are dynamic and potentially reversible marks involved in gene regulation, which can be influenced by genetics, environment, and stochastic events. Here, we review advances in epigenetic studies of discordant MZ twins, focusing on disease. The study of epigenetics and disease using discordant MZ twins offers the opportunity to control for many potential confounders encountered in general population studies, such as differences in genetic background, early-life environmental exposure, age, gender, and cohort effects. Recently, analysis of disease-discordant MZ twins has been successfully used to study epigenetic mechanisms in aging, cancer, autoimmune disease, psychiatric, neurological, and multiple other traits. Epigenetic aberrations have been found in a range of phenotypes, and challenges have been identified, including sampling time, tissue specificity, validation, and replication. The results have relevance for personalized medicine approaches, including the identification of prognostic, diagnostic, and therapeutic targets. The findings also help to identify epigenetic markers of environmental risk and molecular mechanisms involved in disease and disease progression, which have implications both for understanding disease and for future medical research.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25484923 PMCID: PMC4254430 DOI: 10.1186/s13073-014-0060-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Med ISSN: 1756-994X Impact factor: 11.117
Figure 1Shared and non-shared potential epigenetic confounding factors throughout the lifetime of MZ twins and unrelated individuals. MZ twins, in contrast with unrelated individuals, share most genetic variants, as well as similar prenatal and early-life environments. The in utero environment is also shared by MZ twins, although to different degrees: they can have a shared placenta and amnion (monochorionic monoamniotic, left picture), a shared placenta but different amnion (monochorionic diamniotic, middle), or a different placenta and amnion (dichorionic diamniotic, right). Epigenetic studies using MZ twins allow the control of most genetic, maternal, environmental, and cohort effects.
Figure 2Heritable and environmental factors contributing to disease. For each complex disease we show the fraction of the phenotypic variance explained by heritable factors, shared environmental factors, and non-shared environmental factors. The estimates were obtained from published studies of stomach, colorectum, pancreas, lung, breast, cervical, uterine, ovary, prostate, bladder and leukemia cancers [29]; strict autism [27]; psoriasis [56]; myocardial infarction [57]; gestational diabetes, type 1 diabetes, and type 2 diabetes [25].
Epigenetic studies using discordant MZ twins*
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| Adolescent depression | Illumina 450 K | Buccal cells (no correction) | Two differentially methylated positions reproducible in brain | 18 discordant pairs of MZ twins | Validation: bisulfite pyrosequencing | [ |
| Alzheimer’s disease | Immunohistochemistry for 5-methylcytosine | Temporal neocortex (no correction) | Significantly reduced levels of DNA methylation | 1 discordant MZ twin pair | [ | |
| Autism spectrum disorders | Custom array | Lymphoblastoid cells (no correction) | 73 differentially methylated CpG islands | 3 pairs of male discordant MZ twin pairs | Validation: bisulfite sequencing and methylation-specific PCR | [ |
| Autism spectrum disorders | Illumina 27 K | Whole blood (no correction) | Differentially methylated regions in genes already mentioned in the literature | 34 discordant and 5 concordant MZ twin pairs for ASD or a related trait | Validation: bisulfite pyrosequencing | [ |
| Bipolar disorder | Illumina 27 K | Whole blood (no correction) | Hypomethylation in the upstream region of | 11 discordant MZ twin pairs | [ | |
| Bipolar disorder | MS-RDA | Lymphoblastoid cells (no correction) | Hypomethylation of | 1 discordant MZ twin pair, 23 unrelated cases, and 18 unrelated controls | Validation: bisulfite pyrosequencing | [ |
| Birth weight | Illumina 450 K | Saliva (correction for buccal epithelium and leukocyte subtypes) | 45 differentially methylated CpG sites | 17 discordant monochorionic MZ female twin pairs | Validation: bisulfite sequencing | [ |
| Breast cancer | Illumina 450 K | Whole blood (no correction) |
| 15 discordant MZ twin pairs | Validation: bisulfite pyrosequencing of 21 discordant MZ twin pairs | [ |
| Caudal duplication anomaly | Targeted bisulfite sequencing | PBMCs and buccal cells (no correction) | Hypermethylation of the | 1 discordant MZ twin pair | [ | |
| Childhood leukemia and secondary thyroid carcinoma | Targeted bisulfite pyrosequencing | Primary skin fibroblasts (no correction) | Increased methylation of | 1 discordant MZ twin pair | [ | |
| Congenital renal agenesis | RRBS | Whole blood (no correction) | 514 DMRs in 25 genes, including 6 related to organ development | 1 discordant MZ twin pair | [ | |
| Major depressive disorder | MeDIP-seq | Whole blood (correction for lymphocytes, monocytes, neutrophils, and eosinophils) | Hypermethylation of a region within the | 50 discordant MZ twin pairs | Replication: MeDIP-seq in 356 unrelated case–control samples | [ |
| Major psychosis | Illumina 27 K | Whole blood (no correction) | Hypomethylation in the promoter region of | 22 discordant MZ twin pairs | Replication: EpiTYPER in 45 post-mortem brain samples | [ |
| Multiple sclerosis | RRBS | CD4+ lymphocytes (no correction) | No reproducible differences were detected | 3 discordant MZ twin pairs | [ | |
| Pain sensitivity | MeDIP-seq | Whole blood (correction for lymphocytes, monocytes, neutrophils, and eosinophils) | Significant association signal in the promoter of the gene | 25 discordant MZ twin pairs | Replication: MeDIP-seq in 50 unrelated samples. Validation: bisulfite pyrosequencing and Illumina 450 k | [ |
| Psoriasis | Illumina 27 K | CD4+ and CD8+ cells (no correction) | Correlation between DNA methylation differences and gene expression differences of genes involved in the immune response only in CD4+ | CD4+: 17 discordant MZ twins pair; CD8+: 13 discordant MZ twins pairs | [ | |
| Schizophrenia | Illumina 27 K | Whole blood (no correction) | Hypermethylation in the upstream region of | 11 discordant MZ twin pairs | [ | |
| Schizophrenia | Targeted bisulfite sequencing | Lymphocytes (no correction) | Patterns of methylation in the 5'-regulatory region of | 1 discordant and 1 concordant MZ twin pair | [ | |
| Systemic lupus erythematosus | Illumina GoldenGate Methylation Cancer Panel I | White blood cells (no correction) | 49 differentially methylated genes potentially relevant in autoimmune inflammatory diseases processes | 5 discordant MZ twin pairs | Validation: bisulfite sequencing | [ |
| Type 1 diabetes | Illumina 27 K | CD14+ monocytes (no correction) | 132 differentially methylated CpG sites | 15 discordant MZ pairs | Validation: bisulfite pyrosequencing. Replication: Illumina 27 K of 4 twin pairs | [ |
| Type 1 diabetes | Illumina 27 K | Immortalized B cell lines (no correction) | 88 differentially methylated CpG sites | 3 discordant and 6 concordant MZ twin pairs | Validation: bisulfite sequencing | [ |
| Ulcerative colitis | Illumina 27 K and MeDIP-chip | Intestinal biopsies (no correction) | 61 disease-associated genes | 10 discordant MZ pairs | Validation: bisulfite pyrosequencing | [ |
*Abbreviations: ASD, autism spectrum disorders; DMR, differentially methylated region; MeDIP-chip, methylated DNA immunoprecipitation and array hybridization (Nimblegen custom 385 k Tiling Arrays in [84]); MS-RDA, methylation-sensitive representational difference analysis; MZ, monozygotic; PBMC, peripheral blood mononuclear cell; RRBS, reduced representation bisulfite sequencing.
†Tissue or cell sample used at discovery stage; cell heterogeneity correction approach is given in parentheses if relevant.
‡Effect sizes are described in the text.
§8.1 K CpG island microarrays (UHN Microarray Centre).