| Literature DB >> 32722411 |
Andrea Maugeri1, Martina Barchitta1.
Abstract
Over the past decades, DNA methylation has been proposed as a molecular mechanism underlying the positive or negative effects of diet on human health. Despite the number of studies on this topic is rapidly increasing, the relationship between dietary factors, changes in DNA methylation and health outcomes remains unclear. In this review, we summarize the literature from observational studies (cross-sectional, retrospective, or prospective) which examined the association of dietary factors (nutrients, foods, and dietary patterns) with DNA methylation markers among diseased or healthy people during the lifetime. Next, we discuss the methodological pitfalls by examining strengths and limitations of published studies. Finally, we close with a discussion on future challenges of this field of research, raising the need for large-size prospective studies evaluating the association between diet and DNA methylation in health and diseases for appropriate public health strategies.Entities:
Keywords: diet; dietary patterns; epigenetics; folate; nutritional epidemiology
Year: 2020 PMID: 32722411 PMCID: PMC7466216 DOI: 10.3390/medicina56080374
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) ISSN: 1010-660X Impact factor: 2.430
Figure 1Search strategy and selection criteria of epidemiological studies examining the association between dietary factors and DNA methylation.
Summary of studies examining the relationship between dietary factors and DNA methylation in cancer patients.
| First Author and Year of Publication | Country | Study Design | Study Population | Dietary Factors | DNA Methylation Markers | Sample Type | DNA Methylation Method | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| van Engeland et al. 2003 [ | The Netherlands | Cross-sectional | 122 patients with colorectal cancer | Alcohol and folate | APC, p14, p16, MLH1, MGMT, and RASSF1A | Tumor biopsy | Methylation Specific PCR | For each gene, prevalence of promoter hypermethylation was higher in patients with low folate intake and high alcohol consumption. The number of patients with at least one gene methylated was higher in the low folate intake/high alcohol intake group than their counterparts |
| Nan et al. 2004 [ | Korea | Case Control | 110 patients with gastric cancer and | Foods, calories, nutrients, vitamins, and minerals | MLH1 | Tumor biopsy | Methylation Specific PCR | Alcohol consumption was associated with higher odds of MLH1 hypermethylation. High consumption of vegetables and low consumption of potato were associated with higher odds of MLH1 hypermethylation |
| Yuasa et al. 2005 [ | Japan | Cross-sectional | 73 patients with gastric cancer | Foods and nutrients | CDX2, p16 and MLH1 | Tumor biopsy | Methylation Specific PCR | Among men, consumption of green tea and cruciferous vegetables was negatively correlated with CDX2 methylation |
| Kraunz et al. 2006 [ | USA | Cross-sectional | 242 patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma | Folate | p16 | Tumor biopsy | Methylation Specific PCR | Low intake of folate was associated with higher odds of p16 methylation |
| Slattery et al. 2006 [ | USA | Case Control | 1154 patients with colon cancer and 1256 controls | Cruciferous vegetables, alcohol, folate, vitamins | CIMP | Tumor biopsy | Methylation Specific PCR | Alcohol consumption was associated with higher odds of CIMP-low. The intake of fiber was associated with CIMP status |
| Mas et al. 2007 [ | Spain | Case Control | 120 patients with colorectal cancer and 296 controls | Nutrients | p16, p14 and MLH1 | Tumor biopsy | Methylation Specific PCR | Patients with low intake of folate, vitamin A, vitamin B1, potassium and iron showed lower p16 methylation than controls. Patients with low vitamin A intake showed lower p14 and MLH1 methylation |
| De Vogel et al. 2008 [ | The Netherlands | Cross-sectional | 648 patients with colorectal cancer | Folate, vitamin B2 and vitamin B6, methionine and alcohol | MLH1 | Tumor biopsy | Methylation Specific PCR | Intakes of folate, vitamin B2, methionine and alcohol were not associated with MLH1 hypermethylation. Among men, intake of vitamin B6 was associated with MLH1 hypermethylation |
| Schernhammer et al. 2009 [ | USA | Cross-sectional | 609 patients with colon cancer | Alcohol, folate and B vitamins | LINE-1 | Tumor biopsy | Pyrosequencing | Participants with higher folate intake were less likely to exhibit LINE-1 hypomethylation. Alcohol consumption was positively associated with LINE-1 hypomethylation |
| Curtin et al. 2011 [ | USA | Case Control | 951 patients with rectal cancer and 1205 controls | Folate, riboflavin, vitamins B6 andB12, and methionine | CIMP | Tumor biopsy | Methylation Specific PCR | Women with higher folate intake had lower odds of CIMP+ phenotype. Men with higher folate intake had higher odds of CIMP+ tumor |
| Tao et al. 2011 [ | USA | Cross-sectional | 1170 women with breast cancer | One-carbon-related micronutrients and compounds | E-cadherin, p16, and RAR-β | Tumor biopsy | Methylation Specific PCR | Dietary intake of folate, vitamins B2, B6, B12, and methionine was not associated with methylation of E- cadherin, p16, and RAR-β |
| Xu et al. 2011 [ | USA | Cross-sectional | 851 women with breast cancer | One-carbon-related micronutrients and compounds | 13 breast cancer-related genes | Tumor biopsy | Methylation Specific PCR and Methyight assay | Intake of B2 and B6 correlated with promoter methylation status in 3 out of the 13 breast cancer genes evaluated. Both positive (hypermethylation) and inverse (hypomethylation) associations were observed |
| Piyathilake et al. 2012 [ | USA | Cross-sectional | 319 women with abnormal cervical cytology | Dietary patterns | LINE-1 | Blood | Pyrosequencing | Women with healthy dietary pattern were more likely to have higher LINE-1 methylation than those who adhered to an unhealthy dietary pattern |
| Zhang et al. 2013 [ | South Korea | Cross-sectional | 184 patients with gastric cancer | Calories, foods, nutrients, vitamins and minerals | RUNX3 | Tumor biopsy | Methylation Specific PCR | High consumption of eggs was associated with higher odds of RUNX3 methylation. High consumption of nuts was associated with higher odds of RUNX3 methylation in patients with |
| Chen et al. 2014 [ | China | Case Control | 90 patients with esophageal squamous cell carcinoma and 60 healthy adults | Roast meat | p16 | Esophageal mucosa tissue | Pyrosequencing | Consumption of roast meat was positively associated with p16 methylation among cases. No association was evident among healthy subjects |
| Nishihara et al. 2014 [ | USA | Cross-sectional | 993 patients with colorectal cancer from the Nurses’ Health Study and the Health Professionals’ Follow-up Study | Alcohol, vitamin B6, vitamin B12, folate, and methionine | IGF2 | Tumor biopsy | Pyrosequencing | Consumption of >15 g alcohol/d was associated with higher risk of colorectal cancer with lower IGF2 methylation levels. The association of vitamin B-6, vitamin B-12, and folate intakes with cancer risk did not significantly differ according to IGF2 methylation level |
| Pirouzpanah et al. 2015 [ | Iran | Cross-sectional | 149 women with breast cancer | Folate, vitamins B2, B6, B12, and methionine | RAR-β, BRCA1 and RASSF1A | Tumor biopsy | Methylation Specific PCR | Intake of folate and vitamin B12 was negatively associated with RAR-β and BRCA1 methylation. Intake of riboflavin and pyridoxine was positively associated with RAR-β methylation |
| Mehta et al. 2017 [ | USA | Cross-sectional | 1285 patients with colorectal cancer from the Health Professionals’ Follow-up Study and the Nurses’ Health Study | Dietary patterns | CIMP | Tumor biopsy | Pyrosequencing | Adherence to the western dietary pattern, characterized by red and processed meats, high-fat dairy products, refined grains, and desserts, was associated with CIMP-low phenotype |
| Ferrari et al. 2019 [ | Brazil | Cross-sectional | 189 patients with colon or rectal adenocarcinoma | Alcohol, folate, vitamins B2, B6, and B12, choline, betaine, methionine, energy, carbohydrate, protein, and lipid | Global DNA methylation | Tumor biopsy and blood | Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay | No association between dietary intakes and global DNA methylation was evident |
Summary of studies examining the relationship between dietary factors and DNA methylation in healthy people.
| First Author and Year of Publication | Country | Study Design | Study Population | Dietary Factors | DNA Methylation Markers | Sample Type | DNA Methylation Method | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stidley et al. 2010 [ | USA | Cross-sectional | 1101 smokers from the Lovelace Smokers Cohort | Total and animal fat, vitamin C, vitamin E, folate, carotene, alpha carotene, beta-carotene, lycopene, lutein and zeaxanthin, and retinol | p16, MGMT, DAPK, RASSF1A, PAX5 α, PAX5 β, GATA4 and GATA5 | Sputum | Methylation Specific PCR | High intake of folate was associated with lower DNA methylation |
| Zhang et al. 2011 [ | USA | Cross-sectional | 161 cancer-free individuals | Folate, vitamins B12 and B6, riboflavin and methionine | LINE-1 | Blood | Pyrosequencing | No association between intake of nutrients in one-carbon metabolism and LINE-1 methylation |
| Ono et al. 2012 [ | Japan | Cross-sectional | 384 healthy women | Folate and vitamins | Global DNA methylation | Blood | Methylight assay | Folate intake was negatively associated with global DNA methylation |
| Zhang et al. 2012 [ | USA | Cross-sectional | 180 cancer-free individuals | Folate and dietary patterns | IL-6 and LINE-1 | Blood | Pyrosequencing | Folate intake was positively associated with LINE-1 methylation |
| Perng et al. 2014 [ | USA | Cross-sectional | 1002 participants of the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis study | Folate, vitamins B12 and B6, zinc, and methionine | LINE-1 and Alu | Blood | Pyrosequencing | Intake of methyl-donor micronutrients was not associated with DNA methylation |
| Agodi et al. 2015 [ | Italy | Cross-sectional | 177 healthy women | Mediterranean Diet and folate | LINE-1 | Blood | Pyrosequencing | Women with low consumption of fruit and those with folate deficiency were more likely to exhibit LINE-1 hypomethylation |
| Shimazu et al. 2015 [ | Japan | Cross-sectional | 281 subjects without cancer and with no history of treatment against | Green/yellow vegetables, fruit and salt | miR-124a-3, EMX1 and NKX6-1 | Gastric mucosa | Methylation Specific PCR | Intake of green/yellow vegetables was negatively associated with methylation of miR-124a-3 |
| Marques-Rocha et al. 2016 [ | Brazil | Cross-sectional | 156 subjects without metabolic disease, chronic inflammation, hydric balance disorders, changes in body composition and problems in nutrient absorption or metabolism | Energy and nutrients | LINE-1, TNF-α and IL-6 | Blood | Methylation-sensitive high-resolution melting analysis | Individuals with higher LINE-1 methylation had higher daily intakes of calories, iron and riboflavin, and lower intakes of copper, niacin and thiamin |
| Nicodemus-Johnson et al. 2017 [ | USA | Prospective | 2148 Caucasian individuals from the Framingham Heart Study Offspring cohort | Fruits and juices | Genomic methylation profile | Blood | Infinium Illumina Human Methylation 450 k BeadChip arrays | There were 5221 and 5434 CpG sites associated with the intake of fruit and juice, respectively |
| Barchitta et al. 2018 [ | Italy | Cross-sectional | 299 healthy women | Mediterranean diet | LINE-1 | Blood | Pyrosequencing | Adherence to the Mediterranean diet was positively associated with LINE-1 methylation level |
| Leng et al. 2018 [ | Mexico | Prospective | 327 Hispanics and 1502 non-Hispanic White smokers from the Lovelace Smokers Cohort | Nutrients | 12 tumor suppressor genes | Sputum | Methylation Specific PCR | Intake of vitamin A, folate, and vitamin D was negatively associated with DNA methylation levels. Intake of saturated fat was positively associated with DNA methylation levels |
| Barchitta et al. 2019 [ | Italy | Cross-sectional | 349 healthy women | Foods and dietary patterns | LINE-1 | Blood | Pyrosequencing | Consumption of whole-meal bread, cereals, fish, fruit, raw and cooked vegetables, legumes, soup, potatoes, fries, rice and pizza were positively correlated with LINE-1 methylation. LINE-1 methylation level increased with increasing adherence to a prudent dietary pattern |
| Mandaviya et al. 2019 [ | Netherlands, Italy, Finland, USA, UK | Prospective | 5841 participants with no history of cancer from 10 cohorts | Folate and vitamin B-12 | Genomic methylation profile | Blood | Infinium Illumina Human Methylation 450 k BeadChip arrays | 74 folate-associated DMRs, of which 73 were negatively associated with folate intake. The most significant folate-associated DMR was a 400-base pair (bp) spanning region annotated to the LGALS3BP gene |
| Zhang et al. 2011 [ | USA | Cross-sectional | 149 cancer-free individuals | Dietary patterns | LINE-1 | Blood | Pyrosequencing | Adherence to a prudent dietary pattern was associated with a lower prevalence of LINE-1 hypomethylation. No association between the Western dietary pattern and LINE-1 methylation was evident |
Summary of studies examining the relationship between dietary factors and DNA methylation and their association with obesity traits and/or cardiometabolic disorders.
| First Author and Year of Publication | Country | Study Design | Study Population | Dietary Factors | DNA Methylation Markers | Sample Type | DNA Methylation Method | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hermsdorff et al. 2013 [ | Spain | Cross-sectional | 40 normal-weight women | Energy and fat | TNF-α | Blood | Epityper Methylation Analysis | Women with high truncal fat showed lower TNF-α methylation than those with lower truncal adiposity. Intake of n-6 fatty acid was negatively associated with TNF-α methylation |
| Gomez-Uriz et al. 2014 [ | Spain | Case Control | 12 patients with a first episode of parenchymal | Nutrients and indexes of quality of diet | TNF-α and PON | Blood | Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption/Ionization-Time Of Flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometry | TNF-α methylation was related to lipid intake and dietary indexes in non-stroke patients. PON methylation was related to energy intake and quality of the diet |
| Carraro et al. 2016 [ | Spain | Cross-sectional | 40 normal-weight healthy women | Fruit and Healthy Eating Index | TNF-α | Blood | MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry | Healthy eating index was negatively associated with TNF-α methylation level. A higher intake of fruits was associated with lower TNF-α methylation |
| Ramos-Lopez et al. 2017 [ | Spain | Cross-sectional | 47 obese adults from the Metabolic Syndrome Reduction in Navarra, Spain trial | Folate | Genomic methylation profile | Blood | Infinium Illumina Human Methylation 450 k BeadChip arrays | A total of 51 CpGs were associated with folate intake, including one located in the CAMKK2 gene. Folate deficiency was related to lower CAMKK2 methylation |
| Ramos-Lopez et al. 2019 [ | Spain | Cross-sectional | 247 adults from the Methyl Epigenome Network Association project | Energy, carbohydrates, protein, and fat | Genomic methylation profile | Blood | Infinium Illumina Human Methylation 450 k BeadChip arrays | Methylation of SLC18A1, SLC6A3, and SLC6A3 correlated with total energy consumption and carbohydrate intake |
Summary of studies examining the relationship between dietary factors and DNA methylation in pregnant women and their children.
| First Author and Year of Publication | Country | Study Design | Study Population | Dietary Factors | DNA Methylation Markers | Sample Type | DNA Methylation Method | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Boeke et al. 2012 [ | USA | Prospective | 830 mother–child pairs | Vitamin B12, betaine, choline, folate, cadmium, zinc and iron | LINE-1 | Maternal and infant cord blood | Pyrosequencing | No association of maternal intake of methyl donor nutrients with maternal and cord blood methylation. Periconceptional betaine intake was inversely associated with cord blood methylation; dietary cadmium was positively associated with first trimester methylation and inversely with cord blood methylation |
| Haggarty et al. 2013 [ | United Kingdom | Prospective | 913 mother–child pairs | Folate intake | PEG3, IGF2, small nuclear ribonucleoprotein polypeptide N, and LINE-1 | Infant cord blood | Pyrosequencing | Folate intake was positively associated with IGF2 methylation and negatively with PEG3 and LINE-1 methylation in the offspring |
| McCullough et al. 2017 [ | USA | Prospective | 338 mother–child pairs from the NEST cohort | Dietary inflammatory potential | IGF2, H19, MEG3, MEG3-IG, PEG3, MEST, SGCE/PEG10, NNAT, PLAGL1 | Infant cord blood | Pyrosequencing | Pro-inflammatory diets increased cytokine levels, but no association between dietary inflammatory potential and DNA methylation was evident |
| Pauwels et al. 2017 [ | Belgium | Prospective | 115 mother–child pairs from the Maternal Nutrition | Betaine, choline, folate, and methionine | Global DNA methylation and RXRA, LEP, DNMT1, and IGF2 | Infant cord blood | Liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry and Pyrosequencing | Before pregnancy, intakes of betaine and methionine were positively associated with DNMT and LEP methylation. In the second trimester, methyl group donor intake was negatively associated with LEP and DNMT methylation. In the last trimester, intake of choline and folate was positively associated with DNMT methylation and negatively with RXRA methylation |
| Rijlaarsdam et al. 2017 [ | UK | Prospective | 346 mother–child pairs from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children | Dietary patterns | IGF2 | Infant cord blood and blood at 7 years | Infinium Illumina Human Methylation 450 k BeadChip arrays | Maternal diet high in fat and carbohydrates before pregnancy was positively associated with IGF2 methylation at birth |
| Taylor et al. 2017 [ | Australia | Prospective | 73 children from the WATCH study | Methionine, folate, vitamins B2, B6 and B12 and choline | Global DNA methylation | Buccal cells | Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay | No association between one-carbon metabolism nutrient intake and global DNA methylation levels was evident |