| Literature DB >> 26161087 |
Abstract
Almost 15 years ago it was hypothesized that polymorphisms of genes encoding enzymes involved in folate metabolism could lead to aberrant methylation of peri-centromeric regions of chromosome 21, favoring its abnormal segregation during maternal meiosis. Subsequently, more than 50 small case-control studies investigated whether or not maternal polymorphisms of folate pathway genes could be risk factors for the birth of a child with Down syndrome (DS), yielding conflicting and inconclusive results. However, recent meta-analyses of those studies suggest that at least three of those polymorphisms, namely MTHFR 677C>T, MTRR 66A>G, and RFC1 80G>A, are likely to act as maternal risk factors for the birth of a child with trisomy 21, revealing also complex gene-nutrient interactions. A large-cohort study also revealed that lack of maternal folic acid supplementation at peri-conception resulted in increased risk for a DS birth due to errors occurred at maternal meiosis II in the aging oocyte, and it was shown that the methylation status of chromosome 21 peri-centromeric regions could favor recombination errors during meiosis leading to its malsegregation. In this regard, two recent case-control studies revealed association of maternal polymorphisms or haplotypes of the DNMT3B gene, coding for an enzyme required for the regulation of DNA methylation at centromeric and peri-centromeric regions of human chromosomes, with risk of having a birth with DS. Furthermore, congenital heart defects (CHD) are found in almost a half of DS births, and increasing evidence points to a possible contribution of lack of folic acid supplementation at peri-conception, maternal polymorphisms of folate pathway genes, and resulting epigenetic modifications of several genes, at the basis of their occurrence. This review summarizes available case-control studies and literature meta-analyses in order to provide a critical and up to date overview of what we currently know in this field.Entities:
Keywords: DNA methylation; Down syndrome; MTHFR; congenital heart defects; epigenetics; folate; folic acid supplementation; polymorphisms
Year: 2015 PMID: 26161087 PMCID: PMC4479818 DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2015.00223
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Genet ISSN: 1664-8021 Impact factor: 4.599
Genetic association studies of folate pathway genes as maternal risk factors for having a child with Down syndrome.
| James et al., | USA | 57/50 | ||
| Hobbs et al., | USA | 157/144 | ||
| O'Leary et al., | Ireland | 48/192 | ||
| Chadefaux-Vekemans et al., | France | 85/107 | No association observed | |
| Grillo et al., | Brazil | 36/200 | ||
| Stuppia et al., | Italy | 64/112 | No association observed | |
| Bosco et al., | Italy | 63/72 | ||
| Takamura et al., | Japan | 31/60 | No association observed | |
| Boduroğlu et al., | Turkey | 152/91 | No association observed | |
| da Silva et al., | Brazil | 154/158 | ||
| Chango et al., | France | 119/119 | No association observed | |
| Acácio et al., | Brazil | 70/88 | ||
| Coppedè et al., | Italy | 80/111 | ||
| Rai et al., | India | 149/165 | ||
| Scala et al., | Italy | 94/264 | ||
| Wang et al., | China | 100/100 | ||
| Meguid et al., | Egypt | 42/48 | ||
| Martínez-Frías, | Spain | 146/188 | No association observed | |
| Wang et al., | China | 64/70 | ||
| Biselli et al., | Brazil | 67/113 | No association observed | |
| Biselli et al., | Brazil | 72/194 | The presence of increasing numbers of 3 or more polymorphic alleles among | |
| Kohli et al., | India | 104/109 | No association observed | |
| Santos-Rebouças et al., | Brazil | 103/108 | No association observed | |
| Coppedè et al., | Italy | 94/113 | ||
| Pozzi et al., | Italy | 74/184 | ||
| Fintelman-Rodrigues et al., | Brazil | 114/110 | ||
| Cyril et al., | India | 36/60 | ||
| Kokotas et al., | Denmark | 181/1084 | No association observed | |
| Brandalize et al., | Brazil | 239/197 | ||
| Brandalize et al., | Brazil | 239/197 | Combined genotypes among | |
| Liao et al., | China | 60/68 | ||
| Neagos et al., | Romania | 26/46 | No association observed | |
| Mendes et al., | Brazil | 105/184 | No association observed | |
| Neagos et al., | Romania | 26/46 | No association observed | |
| Coppedè et al., | Italy | 29/32 | Artificial neural networks selected 6 variables (micronucleus frequency, | |
| Vraneković et al., | Croatia | 111/141 | No association observed | |
| Sadiq et al., | Jordan | 53/29 | ||
| Marucci et al., | Brazil | 105/185 | ||
| Zampieri et al., | Brazil | 86/161 | ||
| Zampieri et al., | Brazil | 105/185 | ||
| Mohanty et al., | India | 52/52 | No association observed | |
| Tayeb, | Saudi Arabia | 30/40 | No association observed | |
| Wang et al., | China | 104/184 | ||
| Wang et al., | China | 104/184 | ||
| Amorim et al., | Brazil | 94/134 | ||
| Coppedè et al., | Italy | 286/305 | No association observed | |
| Coppedè et al., | Italy | 172/157 | ||
| Kaur and Kaur, | India | 110/111 | No association observed | |
| Cretu et al., | Romania | 26/46 | No association observed | |
| Pandey et al., | India | 80/100 | ||
| Liao et al., | China | 76/115 | ||
| Coppedè et al., | Italy | 253/298 | ||
| Jaiswal et al., | India | 150/172 | Significant increased frequency of the -579G/-149T haplotype in case mothers | |
| Izci Ay et al., | Turkey | 47/49 |
MDS, mothers of Down syndrome individuals; MC, control mothers.
Meta-analyses of studies linking polymorphisms of folate pathway genes to the maternal risk for having a birth with Down syndrome.
| Zintzaras, | 1.129/1.489 | Allele contrast (OR = 1.18; 95% CI = 0.99–1.40) | Whites | |
| 746/888 | Allele contrast (OR = 1.02; 95% CI = 0.80–1.29) | Whites | ||
| 559/866 | Allele contrast (OR = 1.30; 95% CI = 0.97–1.74) | Whites | ||
| Medica et al., | 1.545/2.052 | N.A. | ||
| 1.007/1.318 | Dominant (OR = 1.06; 95% CI = 0.85–1.31) | |||
| 623/936 | Dominant (OR = 1.54; 95% CI = 0.98–2.42) | |||
| 439/731 | Dominant (OR = 1.04; 95% CI = 0.80–1.35) | |||
| 354/644 | Dominant (OR = 1.32; 95% CI = 0.95–1.82) | |||
| 367/542 | Dominant (OR = 0.97; 95% CI = 0.67–1.40) | |||
| Amorim and Lima, | 1.226/1.533 | N.A. | ||
| Costa-Lima et al., | 2.101/2.702 | |||
| Wu et al., | 2.806/4.597 | Caucasians | ||
| Caucasians | ||||
| Caucasians | ||||
| 1.854/2.364 | Allele contrast (OR = 1.03; 95% CI = 0.90–1.17)h | Caucasians | ||
| Coppedè et al., | 1.171/1.402 | Allele contrast (OR = 1.08; 95% CI = 0.93–1.25)h | Caucasians | |
| Coppedè et al., | 930/1.240 | N.A. | ||
| Dominant (OR = 1.09; 95% CI = 0.83–1.43) | N.A. | |||
| N.A. | ||||
| Yang et al., | 2.458/3.144 | |||
| 1.664/2.027 | Allele contrast (OR = 1.16; 95% CI = 0.98–1.38) | Caucasians | ||
| 1.478/2.037 | Caucasians | |||
| 1.038/1.286 | Allele contrast (OR = 1.07; 95% CI = 0.91–1.25) | Caucasians | ||
| 897/1.249 | Caucasians | |||
| 825/1.034 | Allele contrast (OR = 1.03; 95% CI = 0.82–1.29) | Caucasians | ||
| Coppedè et al., | 1.171/1.402 | Europeans | ||
| Europeans | ||||
| The study was restricted to Caucasians | ||||
| Victorino et al., | 2.223/2.807 | |||
| Caucasians | ||||
| 1.601/1.849 | Allele contrast (OR = 1.06; 95% CI = 0.91–1.24) | Caucasians | ||
| Rai et al., | 3.098/4.852 | |||
| Balduino Victorino et al., | 1.311/1.674 | Allele contrast (OR = 1.11; 95% CI = 0.97–1.26) | Caucasians | |
| 1.486/2.163 | Allele contrast (OR = 1.18; 95% CI = 0.99–1.40) | Caucasians | ||
| 825/1034 | Allele contrast (OR = 1.07; 95% CI = 0.86–1.34) | Brazilians | ||
| 497/930 | N.A. | |||
| 495/743 | Allele contrast (OR =1.27; 95% CI =0.83–1.93) | N.A. |
MDS, mothers of Down syndrome individuals; MC, control mothers.
Caucasian inhabitants of Europe and North America. Studies in Asian populations, in mixed Brazilian populations, or in inhabitants of the Middle East were scarce for subgrouping.
Tropical Regions: between 23.5°Noth (N) and 23.5° South (S); Sub-Tropical Regions: between 23.5° and 40° N/S; Northern Region: ≥40° N.
The authors included in the “Caucasians” subgroup both Europeans, North Americans and inhabitants of the Middle East. Brazilian studies conducted either in mixed Brazilian populations or in individuals of European descent were subgrouped as “Others.”
The “Caucasian” subgroup was composed by studies performed in Europeans; The Brazilian subgroup was composed by studies performed in mixed Brazilian populations.
The authors included in the “Caucasians” subgroup both Europeans, North Americans and inhabitants of the Middle East. Brazilian studies conducted either in mixed Brazilian populations or in individuals of European descent were subgrouped as “Brazilians.”
This study was restricted to Caucasians that were subgrouped as follows: Europeans, all the Europeans; Not Europeans, Americans of European descent; Mediterraneans, European inhabitants of Mediterranean regions.
Similar results observed for dominant, recessive, and/or co-dominant models.
Analysis of markers of one-carbon metabolism and gene-nutrient interactions.
| James et al., | USA/Canada | 57/50 | Plasma hcy | Increased hcy levels in MDS. | |
| O'Leary et al., | Ireland | 48/192 | Plasma hcy | No difference in hcy levels between MDS and control mothers. | |
| Chadefaux-Vekemans et al., | France | 85/107 | Plasma hcy | No difference in hcy levels between MDS and control mothers. | |
| Bosco et al., | Italy | 63/72 | Plasma hcy | Increased hcy levels in MDS. | |
| Takamura et al., | Japan | 31/60 | Plasma hcy | Increased hcy levels in MDS. | |
| da Silva et al., | Brazil | 154/158 | Plasma hcy | Increased hcy levels in MDS. | |
| Scala et al., | Italy | 94/264 | Plasma hcy | No difference in hcy levels between MDS and control mothers. | |
| Martínez-Frías et al., | Spain | 91/90 | Plasma hcy | Increased hcy levels in MDS. | |
| Wang et al., | China | 100/100 | Plasma hcy | Increased hcy levels in MDS. | |
| Meguid et al., | Egypt | 42/48 | Folate intake | Folate intake from foods was significantly lower than the recommended daily allowance in MDS. | |
| Biselli et al., | Brazil | 58/49 | Plasma hcy | Increased hcy levels in MDS. | |
| Kohli et al., | India | 92/91 | Plasma hcy | Decreased hcy levels in MDS. | |
| Santos-Rebouças et al., | Brazil | 103/108 | Folate intake | Folate intake from foods was significantly lower than the recommended daily allowance in both MDS and control mothers. | |
| Mohanty et al., | India | 52/52 | Plasma hcy | Decreased serum folate levels and trend for decreased RBC folate in MDS. | |
| Mendes et al., | Brazil (São Paulo) | 105/185 | Plasma hcy | ||
| Wang et al., | China | 104/184 | Plasma hcy | Increased hcy levels in MDS. | |
| Pandey et al., | India | 80/100 | Plasma hcy | Decreased serum folate and RBC folate, and increased hcy levels in MDS, but no association with the genotype. | |
| Coppedè et al., | Italy | 172/187 | Plasma hcy | No difference in hcy, folate or vitamin B12 levels between groups. |
MDS, mothers of Down syndrome individuals; MC, control mothers.
Intake estimated from food frequency questionnaire.
RBC folate, Red blood cell folate.
MMA, methylmalonic acid, an indicator of the vitamin B12 status.
Genetic association studies of folate pathway genes as risk factors for having a child with Down syndrome and congenital heart defects.
| Brandalize et al., | Brazil | 239 MDS | ||
| Locke et al., | USA | 121 case families: (mother, father, proband with DS-CHD) 122 control families: (mother, father, proband with DS and no CHD) | 45 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) of: | Several |
| Božović et al., | Croatia | 112 DS individuals: (54 DS-CHD and 58 DS without CHD) 221 healthy controls 107 MDS | No difference in allele or genotype frequencies between DS-CHD cases and DS cases without CHD, no difference between DS cases and controls, and no association between the presence of either | |
| Elsayed et al., | Egypt | 61 mothers of CHD individuals: 25 of DS-CHD 36 of CHD without DS | Increased frequency of the |
MDS, mothers of Down syndrome individuals.
DS-CHD, Down syndrome individuals with congenital heart defects.
GI disease, congenital gastrointestinal disease.
AVSD, atrioventricular septal defect.
Figure 1Overview of the folate metabolic pathway. The diagram illustrates the enzymes, metabolites and cofactors discussed in this article. Enzymes: BHMT, betaine-homocysteine methyltransferase; CBS, cystathionine β-synthase; DHFR, dihydrofolate reductase; MTs, Methyltransferases; MTHFD1, methylenetetrahydrofolate dehydrogenase; MTHFR, methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase; MTR, methionine synthase; MTRR, methionine synthase reductase; RFC1, reduced folate carrier; SHMT, serine hydroxymethyltransferase; TC, transcobalamin; TCR, tanscobalamin receptor; TYMS, thymidilate synthase. Metabolites: DHF, dihydrofolate; GSH, glutathione; THF, tetrahydrofolate; dTMP, deoxythymidine monophosphate; dUMP, deoxyuridine monophosphate; SAH, S-adenosyl homocysteine; SAM, S-adenosylmethionine. Cofactors: B2, vitamin B2; B6, vitamin B6; B12, vitamin B12 or cobalamin.
Figure 2Trans-generational contribution of folate metabolism to the risk of birth of a child with Down syndrome. The maternal grandmother's diet during pregnancy provides dietary folates, i.e., the one-carbon units required for the correct development of the mother which is still a developing embryo in the maternal grandmother's body, including those required for the initiation of meiosis of primordial oocytes. Chromosome 21 recombination errors, leading to either meiosis I (MI) or meiosis II (MII) malsegregation events, occur during the prophase of the first meiotic division of primordial maternal oocytes in the maternal grandmother's body. Therefore, the predisposition to those errors is likely to result from complex interactions among the maternal grandmother's dietary provision of folate, her lifestyles such as smoking and drinking that can impair folate metabolism, and both the grandmother's genotype and the genotype of the mother (i.e., the different alleles of folate pathway genes that can account for inter-individual differences in folate absorption and metabolism). The maternal diet and lifestyles at peri-conception and during pregnancy can account for MII errors, as well as for the correct provision of dietary folates to the developing embryo. In this regard, it was hypothesized that complex interactions among maternal diet, lifestyles and genotype, and the metabolic demands of fetuses with trisomy 21, that overexpress several folate pathway genes mapping to chromosome 21, could account for either abortion or survival up to the birth. Those complex gene-environment interactions can also result in epigenetic changes in the developing embryo potentially affecting the birth and/or the complexity of the phenotype.