| Literature DB >> 28588744 |
Kyung Hwa Jung1, Stephanie Lovinsky-Desir2, Beizhan Yan3, David Torrone1, Jennifer Lawrence1, Jacqueline R Jezioro1, Matthew Perzanowski4, Frederica P Perera4, Steven N Chillrud3, Rachel L Miller1,4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Asthma gene DNA methylation may underlie the effects of air pollution on airway inflammation. However, the temporality and individual susceptibility to environmental epigenetic regulation of asthma has not been fully elucidated. Our objective was to determine the timeline of black carbon (BC) exposure, measured by personal sampling, on DNA methylation of allergic asthma genes 5 days later to capture usual weather variations and differences related to changes in behavior and activities. We also sought to determine how methylation may vary by seroatopy and cockroach sensitization and by elevated fractional exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO).Entities:
Keywords: Allergic sensitization; Black carbon exposure; Changes in DNA methylation; Pediatric asthma; Personal monitoring
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28588744 PMCID: PMC5457544 DOI: 10.1186/s13148-017-0361-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Epigenetics ISSN: 1868-7075 Impact factor: 6.551
Fig. 1Study design: a time 1 (March 2012 and August 2015) and b repeated 6 months later (time 2). Personal BC was monitored for 24 h and collected on day 1 (BC1) and day 6 (BC2); Buccal DNA and FeNO were measured on d1 (BDNA1; FeNO1) and day 6 (BDNA2; FeNO2). Sampling was repeated 6 months later (time 2); measure five marks when effects of BC on methylation were measured 5 days later; bolded measures were used in current analyses. BC2 in a thinner box and FeNO1 were not used in the current analyses
Cohort characteristics (N = 143)
| Characteristic | Seroatopya
| Non-atopy |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Maternal ethnicity | 0.34 | ||
| Dominican | 45/75 (60%) | 46/68 (68%) | |
| African American | 30/75 (40%) | 22/68 (32%) | |
| Age mean [min–max], years | 12.7 [10.4–14.3] | 12.8 [10.5–14.0] | 0.40 |
| Girls | 38/75 (51%) | 39/68 (57%) | 0.42 |
| Maternal high-school degree or greater | 40/74 (54%) | 38/63 (60%) | 0.46 |
| Maternal asthma (+) | 23/75 (31%) | 19/68 (28%) | 0.72 |
| Prenatal ETS exposureb (+) | 23/74 (31%) | 22/67 (33%) | 0.62 |
| Current ETS exposurec (+) | 7/67 (10%) | 8/60 (13%) | 0.82 |
| Asthmad | 44/75 (59%) | 30/68 (44%) | 0.08 |
| BMIe z score, median [IQR] | 1.15 [1.43] | 0.91 [1.35] | 0.28 |
| Overweight (≥85th percentile) | 40/75 (53%) | 33/68 (49%) | 0.57 |
| Obesity (≥95th percentile) | 24/75 (32%) | 12/68 (18%) | <0.05 |
| Personal BCf μg/m3, median [IQR] | |||
| Day 1 | 1.23 [1.01] | 1.27 [1.07] | 0.68 |
| Day 6 | 1.12 [1.25] | 1.24 [1.29] | 0.45 |
| FeNO ppbg, median [IQR] | |||
| Day 1 | 14.5 [15.3] | 8.8 [8.85] | <0.01 |
| Day 6 | 15.4 [12.4] | 9.3 [8.81] | <0.01 |
IQR interquartile range
aTotal IgE ≥80 IU/ML at age 7, 9, or 11 year
bReport of any smoker in the house during pregnancy
cReport of any smoker in the home during the 1-week sampling period
dDetermined by a specialist physician using standardized criteria at age 5–12 years [42]
eBody mass index (BMI) calculated by weight (kg)/height (m)2, standard deviation (SD)
fPersonal BC measured at time 1
gFeNO measured at time 1, n = 31 missing due to either invalid data or ambient NO >100 ppb
hChi-square test for categorical variables and Mann-Whitney test for continuous variables (age, BMI z score, personal BC, and FeNO)
Effects of personal BC exposure on DNA promoter region methylation measured 5 days later: RR of methylation in the highest tertile vs the second and lowest (as reference)
| Overall effects, RR [95% CI] | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Gene | CpG promoter regiona | Unadjusted | Adjustedb |
| IL4 | −326 | 0.82 [0.63–1.06] | 0.82 [0.63–1.07] |
| −48 | 0.75 [0.58–0.96]* | 0.77 [0.61–0.97] | |
| IFNγ | −186 | 1.15 [0.86–1.53] | 1.18 [0.88–1.58] |
| −54 | 0.91 [0.68–1.20] | 0.92 [0.68–1.26] | |
| NOS2A | +5099 | 0.84 [0.64–1.09] | 0.82 [0.65–1.03] |
| +5106 | 1.20 [0.91–1.59] | 1.21 [0.94–1.55] | |
| ARG2 | −32, −30, and −26c | 1.06 [0.95–1.18] | 1.04 [0.94–1.15] |
Note: 86 of the 143 children underwent repeat testing 6 months later allowing for n = 229 total observations analyzed
* p value <0.05
aCpG position relative to the transcriptional start site
bAdjusted for race/ethnicity, sex, age, asthma diagnosis, obesity, seroatopy, heating season, and DNA methylation at day 1
cAverage methylation of ARG2 CpG sites of −32, −30, and −26
Fig. 2Effects of personal BC exposure on DNA promoter region methylation 5 days later of a IL4 (CpG−326, CpG−48, b IFNγ (CpG−186, CpG−54), and c NOS2A (CpG+5099, CpG+5106), stratified by allergic sensitization. Relative risk (RR) estimates of DNA methylation of asthma genes and 95% confidence interval (CI), for a unit increase in log BC concentrations among seroatopic (♦ N = 75), non-atopic (⋄ N = 68), cockroach-sensitized (• CR+ N = 55), and non-sensitized (○ CR− N = 88) children, adjusting for race/ethnicity, sex, age, asthma diagnosis, obesity, season, and DNA methylation on day 1. *p < 0.05 and **p < 0.01
Fig. 3Effects of DNA methylation on FeNO measured 5 days later. Beta coefficient of FeNO and 95% CI for a unit increase in log percent DNA methylation presented. Model adjusted for race/ethnicity, sex, age, asthma diagnosis, obesity, season, and ambient NO on day 6. Sixteen children were removed from the analyses of FeNO and DNA methylation due to either high ambient NO levels (>100 ppb) or equipment failure, resulting in a sample size of 127. *p < 0.05 and **p < 0.01