| Literature DB >> 33781317 |
Mojgan Sheikhpour1,2, Mobina Maleki3, Maryam Ebrahimi Vargoorani3,4, Vahid Amiri3.
Abstract
Several studies show that childhood and adulthood asthma and its symptoms can be modulated through epigenetic modifications. Epigenetic changes are inheritable modifications that can modify the gene expression without changing the DNA sequence. The most common epigenetic alternations consist of DNA methylation and histone modifications. How these changes lead to asthmatic phenotype or promote the asthma features, in particular by immune pathways regulation, is an understudied topic. Since external effects, like exposure to tobacco smoke, air pollution, and drugs, influence both asthma development and the epigenome, elucidating the role of epigenetic changes in asthma is of great importance. This review presents available evidence on the epigenetic process that drives asthma genes and pathways, with a particular focus on DNA methylation, histone methylation, and acetylation. We gathered and assessed studies conducted in this field over the past two decades. Our study examined asthma in different aspects and also shed light on the limitations and the important factors involved in the outcomes of the studies. To date, most of the studies in this area have been carried out on DNA methylation. Therefore, the need for diagnostic and therapeutic applications through this molecular process calls for more research on the histone modifications in this disease.Entities:
Keywords: Acetylation; Asthma; DNA methylation; Epigenetic; Gene expression; Lung diseases
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33781317 PMCID: PMC8008616 DOI: 10.1186/s13148-021-01049-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Epigenetics ISSN: 1868-7075 Impact factor: 6.551
Fig. 1a When acetyl groups (COCH3) bind to histone tails via histone acetyltransferase (HAT), the DNA strand around nucleosomes loosens and, as a result, the gene will be expressed. Conversely, the removal of the acetyl groups by histone deacetylase (HDAC) turns off the gene transcription. b While the presence of methyl group (CH3) on cytosines inactivates the transcription of a gene, which is catalyzed by DNA methyltransferase (Dnmt), the DNA demethylation contributes to the gene expression
Fig. 2Allergens stimulate structural cells (epithelial cells and smooth muscle cells) to produce different kinds of cytokines, including IL-5, IL-4, IL-13, and thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP). This process activates naïve T-cells (Th0) to differentiate into Th1 and Th2 cells. The imbalance between these T-cells would lead to inflammation in asthma. Released cytokines from Th2 result in IgE production from B-cells, which bind to their receptors on mast cells. Mast cell-derived prostaglandin D2 (PGD2) and Th2 cytokines activate ILC2, which can provoke eosinophilia and hyperactivity in asthma. Th17 and IL-17 are involved in asthma exacerbation by recruitment of neutrophils
Summary of the research works about the DNA methylation role in asthma-related genes and pathways
| Author and year | Subjects | Specimen | Genes/regions | Phenotype | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kwon et al. 2008 | Adults | Venous blood, cultured CD4 + | Bronchial asthma | [ | |
| Breton et al. 2011 | Children | Buccal cells | Childhood asthma | [ | |
| Brand et al. 2012 | Female BALB/c mice and BALB/ | Blood | Asthma | [ | |
| Baccarelli et al. 2012 | Children | Nasal cell | Childhood asthma | [ | |
| Verma et al. 2013 | Balb/c mice | lung, trachea tissues and BALF cells and Whole blood | Asthma | [ | |
| Gagné-Ouellet et al. 2015 | Adult and Children | Whole blood | Asthma and atopy | [ | |
| Larouche et al. 2018 | Adults | Bronchial epithelial cell line | Asthma | [ | |
| Forno et al. 2019 | Children | Nasal cells | 30 CpG regions | Atopy and atopic asthma | [ |
Summary of the research works about the role of histone acetylation and its regulatory enzymes in asthma-related genes and pathways
| Author and year | Subjects | Specimen | Gene | Highlighted epigenetic effect | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Li et al. 2010 | Adults | Cultured human A549 alveolar epithelial cells, PBMC and BALF RNA samples | HDAC2 is regulated by GRβ resulting in the downregulation of | [ | |
| Mishra et al. 2011 | Ovalbumin sensitized and challenged mice and saline sensitized and challenged mice | Lung tissue | Histone H4 acetylation and DNA methylation | [ | |
| Butler et al. 2012 | Adults | Primary bronchial epithelial cell culture | In severe asthma, no change in HDAC2 and HDAC1 expression caused by GRβ was observed | [ | |
| Li et al. 2013 | Human adults and Wistar rats | Human peripheral blood T-cells and rat lung T-cells | H3 and H4 acetylation and H3 Lys9 dimethylation | [ | |
| Gunawardhana et al. 2014 | Adults | Peripheral blood monocytes and sputum macrophages | - | The interplay between HAT and HDAC affects airway inflammation in asthma | [ |
| Seumois et al. 2014 | Adults | Peripheral blood and primary human CD4 + T-cells | T-cell enhancers | H3 Lys4 dimethylation | [ |
| Clifford et al. 2015 | Adults | Primary cultures of human ASM (HASM) cells isolated from bronchial biopsies and large airway tissue | H3Lys18 acetylation | [ | |
| Wawrzyniak et al. 2016 | Adults | Air liquid interface cultures of human primary bronchial epithelial cells in | Tight junctions | Histone acetylation | [ |
| Stadhouders et al. 2018 | Gata3YFP/YFP reporter mice | ILC2s and human peripheral blood | ILC2 genes | H3 lys4 dimethylation | [ |
| Cheng et al. 2019 | Female BALB/c mice | Lung tissue | Histone acetylation | [ |
Fig. 3Oral contraceptive pills (OCP), which are used in different conditions, at the age of menarche, can affect GATA3 methylation level in cytosine-phosphate-guanine (CpG) sites via, presumably, sex hormones. Interaction between GATA3 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and OCP is influenced by these methylation changes, which affect the immunological process leading to asthma
Summary of the studies on the impact of the subject's characteristics on the methylation status in asthma
| Author and references | Year | Subject | Characteristics | Specimen | Genes/regions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sood et al. [ | 2012 | Old male adults | Age | Sputum | |
| Naumova et al. [ | 2013 | Male and female adults and children | Sex and age | PBMC | |
| Reinius et al. [ | 2013 | Children and adults | Age | Peripheral blood | |
| Rastogi et al. [ | 2013 | Children | Disorder: obesity | PBMC | |
| Curtin et al. [ | 2013 | Children with ages 2 and 8 | Age | Cord blood | |
| Lovinsky-Desir et al. [ | 2014 | Adult and children | Age | Buccal cells and PBMC | |
| Zhang et al. [ | 2014 | Girls with the age of 10 and 18 | Age | Whole and peripheral blood | |
| Guthikonda et al. [ | 2014 | 18-year-old females | Drug: OCP | Peripheral blood | |
| Tuwaijri et al. [ | 2016 | Male and female adults | Sex | Peripheral blood | 17q12–q21 and 5q31.1 regions |
| Janjanam et al. [ | 2016 | 10- and 18-year-old females | Vaccination | Guthrie cards and whole blood | |
| Gao et al. [ | 2017 | Children | Sex | Bloodspots | |
| Peng et al. [ | 2019 | Children | Age | Peripheral and cord blood | - |
| Jeong et al. [ | 2019 | Female adults | BMI status | Peripheral blood | Inflammatory pathway and NLRP3-IL1B-IL17 axis-related genes |
| Wu et al. [ | 2019 | APP/PS1 and C57BL/6 J mice | Disorder: Alzheimer's disease | BALF cells |
Summary of studies on transgenerational effects of epigenetic regulations in asthma
| Author and year | Subjects | Gene/region | Epigenetic change | Environment | Phenotype | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Perera et al. 2009 | Dominican and African-American women and their children | CpG methylation | Transplacental Exposure to Airborne Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons | Childhood asthma | [ | |
| Brand et al. 2011 | BALB/c mice and BALB/cscid mice | histone H4 acetylation | Microbiome | Transmaternal asthma protection | [ | |
| Torrone et al. 2012 | Inner-city children | DNA methylation | - | Asthma | [ | |
| Fu et al. 2012 | Children | Hypermethylation | NO2 exposure | Childhood asthma severity | [ | |
| Reinius et al. 2013 | Children and adults | DNA methylation | Current smoking in adults and parental smoking in children | Adult severe asthma and childhood allergic asthma | [ | |
| Kuo et al. 2013 | Adults | Histone H3Lys4 trimethylation | Exposure to Diethylhexyl phthalate and butyl benzyl phthalate | Asthma development | [ | |
| Michel et al. 2013 | Children | DNA methylation | Farm exposure in early childhood | Asthma protection | [ | |
| Sofer et al. 2013 | Male adults | Genes like, | DNA methylation | Exposures to black carbon and sulfate | Asthma | [ |
| Gaffin et al. 2014 | Inner-city children | DNA methylation | - | Decreased asthma severity | [ | |
| Wang et al. 2015 | Children | DNA methylation | Phthalate exposure | Childhood asthma | [ | |
| Yang et al. 2015 | inner-city children | Hypomethylation and hypermethylation | - | persistent childhood atopic asthma | [ | |
| Sarnowski et al. 2016 | Families with different nationalities | DNA methylation | - | Co-occurrence of asthma and rhinitis | [ | |
| Somineni et al. 2016 | Children (siblings) with age 5–18 | DNA methylation | Exposure traffic-related air pollution | Childhood asthma | [ | |
| Jung et al. 2017 | Children | DNA methylation | Short-term exposure to PM2.5 and vanadium | Childhood asthma | [ | |
| Chan et al. 2017 | Children | - | Higher global DNA methylation | Socioeconomic status and race/ethnicity | Childhood asthma | [ |
| Montrose et al. 2017 | Children | DNA methylation | Dietary intake | Childhood asthma | [ | |
| Wang et al. 2017 | Children | Increased DNA methylation | Dust mite allergen-specific immunotherapy | Childhood allergic asthma | [ | |
| Christensen et al. 2017 | C57BL6 mice | DNA methylation | Prenatal tobacco smoke exposure | Susceptibility to asthma | [ | |
| Jung et al. 2017 | Children | Demethylation of DNA | Exposure to black carbon | Allergic asthma | [ | |
| Pech et al. 2018 | Children | DNA methylation | Rhinovirus infection | Childhood asthma | [ | |
| Gao et al. 2018 | Newborns and children | Hypermethylation | prenatal tobacco smoke exposure | Childhood asthma | [ | |
| Zhang et al. 2018 | Children (siblings) with age 5–18 | DNA methylation | Traffic-related air pollution and house dust mite | Childhood asthma | [ | |
| Prunicki et al. 2018 | Children | DNA methylation | Exposure to NO2, CO, and PM2.5 | Childhood asthma | [ | |
| Zhou et al. 2019 | BALB/c mice | Hyperacetylation of H3Lys9 and H3Lys14 | Exposure to PM2.5 and cold stress | Asthma exacerbation | [ | |
| Neophytou et al. 2019 | Children | DNA methylation | Maternal smoking during pregnancy | Asthma development | [ | |
| Wu et al. 2019 | Children and newborns | LMO2, GSTM1, and IL-10 | Hypermethylation | Prenatal exposure to paternal tobacco smoke | Childhood asthma at age 6 | [ |
| Chen et al. 2019 | C57BL/6 J mice | Th2 cytokine locus | Hypomethylation | Early-life undernutrition | Susceptibility to asthma | [ |
| Kyburz et al. 2019 | C57BL/6 mice | DNA methylation | Transmaternal Helicobacter pylori exposure | Asthma protection | [ | |
| Qi et al. 2020 | Children | 60 CpG regions associated with asthma/rhinitis | CpG methylation | active and passive smoking, molds, and pets | Asthma, rhinitis, asthma/rhinitis at age 16 | [ |
| Nafea et al. 2020 | Children | Hypermethylation | Blood aluminum concentration | Bronchial asthma | [ | |
| Yang et al. 2020 | Children | Hypomethylation | Bisphenol A exposure | Asthma | [ |
Fig. 4Pre- and postnatal exposure to epigenetic-mediated asthma stimulators and their outcomes. a Asthma triggers comprising tobacco smoking, house dust mite, air pollution, and lifestyle can negatively regulate the fetus epigenome. b Monozygotic twins that were exposed to these triggers in utero may or may not develop childhood asthma. c The microbiome may develop a protective epigenome in the offspring against asthma. d External factors can affect the person after birth. e The epigenetic changes seen in early life may affect the phenotype in childhood or adulthood, and those who showed the symptoms in childhood may recover in adulthood while those who were healthy children may become adults with asthmatic symptoms
Summary of the research works about the role of epigenetics in determining the propensity for asthma later in life and in the next generations
| Author and year | Subject | Gene/region | Epigenetic changes | Phenotype | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DeVries et al. 2015 | Children | Hypermethylation | Childhood asthma | [ | |
| Murphy et al. 2015 | Monozygotic twins with asthma discordancy at age 10 | DNA methylation | Childhood asthma discordancy | [ | |
| Yue et al. 2017 | Pregnant BALB/C mice | Demethylation of the DNA | Allergic asthma in offsprings | [ | |
| Everson et al. 2019 | Children up to 18 | Hypomethylation | Adolescent asthma | [ | |
| Rehan et al. 2012 | Pregnant Sprague Dawley F0 rats | DNA methylation and histone 3 and 4 acetylation in the lung and gonad | Childhood asthma predisposition in the F2 generation | [ | |
| Gunawardhana et al. 2014 | 12-month-old infants | 11 genes including | DNA methylation | Asthma development | [ |
| Gregory et al. 2017 | Pregnant BALB/C mice | 41 loci | DNA methylation | Asthma susceptibility in the F2 and F3 generations | [ |
| Den Dekker et al. 2019 | Children | 18 asthma-related differentially methylated regions | DNA methylation | Childhood asthma | [ |
Summary of the research works about SNP-CpG methylation interaction on specific genes in asthma
| Author and year | Subjects | Specimen | Significant SNP/CpG | Gene | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Soto-Ramírez et al. 2013 | 18-year-old females | Whole blood | rs3024685/ cg09791102 | [ | |
| Zhang et al. 2014 | Girls with the age of 10 and 18 | Whole and peripheral blood | rs3024685, rs8832/ cg26937798 (Related to IL4R) | IL4, IL4R, IL13, GATA3, and STAT6 | [ |
| Acevedo et al. 2015 | Boys and girls at age 8 | whole blood | rs7216389, rs4065275 and rs12603332 | [ | |
| Mukherjee et al. 2016 | 18-year-old men and women and a subset of women at age 10 | Peripheral blood | rs11763517/cg00666422 | [ | |
| Nicodemus-Johnson et al. 2016 | Adults | Endobronchial airway epithelial cells | rs2517955/cg05616858 | [ | |
| Zhang et al. 2017 | Children with ages 5–8 | Nasal epithelial cells | 6 significant interaction sites out of 182 SNPs | [ | |
| Dijk et al. 2018 | Children at age 4 | Whole blood | rs1420101/cg11916609, rs56179005/cg20060108,rs76886731/cg25869196,and rs1420104/cg19795292 | [ | |
| Kim et al. 2019 | Puerto Rican and African-American children | Nasal epithelial cells | - | [ | |
| Kogan et al. 2019 | Adults | Whole blood | rs10818651/cg21469772, rs10985567/cg21213617 | [ |
Fig. 5Change in DNA methylation and mRNA expression of Vanin-1 (VNN1) in response to corticosteroid treatment. a The differentiation of CpG methylation ratio in VNN1 promoter region between good responders and bad responders to corticosteroid treatment. b the association between the VNN1 CpG methylation and the mRNA expression [Reprinted with permission from Elsevier] [141]
Summary of epigenetic differentiation studies in asthma
| Author and year | Subjects | Specimen | Status | Gene/region | Differentiation | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cosio et al. 2004 | Adults with atopic asthma | Alveolar macrophages and peripheral blood monocytes | Mild, moderate, and severe asthma in response to drugs that change HDAC and HAT activity | Histone acetylation | [ | |
| Pascual et al. 2011 | Adults with allergic asthma | PBMC | allergic subjects, aspirin-intolerant asthmatics, and healthy subjects | Hypermethylation | [ | |
| Isidoro-García et al. 2011 | Adults with allergic asthma | PBMC derived CD19 + B lymphocytes | Asthma severity | Hypomethylation | [ | |
| Runyon et al. 2012 | Adult monozygotic twins | Peripheral whole blood and BALF | Childhood asthma discordancy | Hypermethylation | [ | |
| Yang et al. 2013 | Adults | Peripheral blood leukocytes | Asthma severity | Same methylation pattern | [ | |
| Li et al. 2013 | Adults with allergic asthma | Peripheral blood T-cells | Severe eosinophilic asthma with glucocorticoid resistance | Histone hypoacetylation | [ | |
| Gunawardhana et al. 2014 | Male and female adults with stable asthma | Peripheral blood CD14 + monocytes | eosinophilic asthma, paucigranulocytic asthma, and neutrophilic asthma | 223, 237, and 72 differentially methylated CpG loci | Hypermethylation | [ |
| Xiao et al. 2015 | Children | Nasal epithelial cells | Corticosteroid treatment response | DNA methylation | [ | |
| Zhang et al. 2017 | Children | Nasal epithelial cells | Steroid treatment response | DNA methylation | [ | |
| Yang et al. 2017 | Inner-city children | Nasal epithelial cells | Persistent atopic asthma | 186 genes | DNA methylation | [ |
| Xu et al. 2018 | Children | Nasal cells, cord blood, whole blood, peripheral blood | Allergic asthma | 14 CpG Sites | Hypomethylation | [ |
| Reese et al. 2019 | Newborns and children | Whole blood and nasal respiratory epithelium cells and eosinophils | Asthma diagnosis in newborns and children | 179 CpGs with 36 regions in children and 9 CpGs with 35 regions in newborns | DNA methylation | [ |
| Shi et al. 2020 | Children | Nasal epithelial cells | Childhood atopic asthma | DNA methylation | [ | |
| Vermeulen et al. 2020 | Adults | Ciliated epithelial cells, basal cells, smooth muscle cells, fibroblasts, neutrophils, and T-cells | Persistence and remission in asthma and in different cell types | 4 differentially methylated CpG sites and 42 regions | DNA methylation | ( |