| Literature DB >> 32202197 |
Carolina Soriano-Tárraga1, Uxue Lazcano1, Eva Giralt-Steinhauer1, Carla Avellaneda-Gómez1, Ángel Ois1, Ana Rodríguez-Campello1, Elisa Cuadrado-Godia1, Alejandra Gómez-González1, Alba Fernández-Sanlés2, Roberto Elosua2,3,4, Israel Fernández-Cadenas5, Natalia Cullell5,6, Joan Montaner7,8, Sebastian Moran9, Manel Esteller10,11,12,13, Jordi Jiménez-Conde1, Jaume Roquer1.
Abstract
DNA methylation is dynamic, varies throughout the life course, and its levels are influenced by lifestyle and environmental factors, as well as by genetic variation. The leading genetic variants at stroke risk loci identified to date explain roughly 1-2% of stroke heritability. Most of these single nucleotide polymorphisms are situated within a regulatory sequence marked by DNase I hypersensitivity sites, which would indicate involvement of an epigenetic mechanism. To detect epigenetic variants associated with stroke occurrence and stroke subtypes. A two-stage case-control epigenome-wide association study was designed. The discovery sample with 401 samples included 218 ischaemic stroke (IS) patients, assessed at Hospital del Mar (Barcelona, Spain) and 183 controls from the REGICOR cohort. In two independent samples (N = 226 and N = 166), we replicated 22 CpG sites differentially methylated in IS in 21 loci, including 2 CpGs in locus ZFHX3, which includes known genetic variants associated with stroke. The pathways associated with these loci are inflammation and angiogenesis. The meta-analysis identified 384 differentially methylated CpGs, including loci of known stroke and vascular risk genetic variants, enriched by loci involved in lipid metabolism, adipogenesis, circadian clock, and glycolysis pathways. We identified a set of 22 CpGs in 21 loci associated with IS. Our analysis suggests that DNA methylation changes may contribute to orchestrating gene expression that contributes to IS.Entities:
Keywords: DNA methylation; EWAS; Ischaemic stroke
Year: 2020 PMID: 32202197 PMCID: PMC7518691 DOI: 10.1080/15592294.2020.1746507
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epigenetics ISSN: 1559-2294 Impact factor: 4.528