1. Associations between antenatal maternal asthma status and placental DNA methylation
- Author
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Alison G. Lee, Nicole Tignor, Whitney Cowell, Elena Colicino, Anne Bozack, Andrea Baccarelli, Pei Wang, and Rosalind J. Wright
- Subjects
Placenta ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,DNA Methylation ,Epigenesis, Genetic ,Cohort Studies ,Fetal Development ,Reproductive Medicine ,Pregnancy ,Humans ,Female ,Prospective Studies ,Child ,Rho Guanine Nucleotide Exchange Factors ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Maternal asthma in pregnancy is associated with adverse perinatal and child health outcomes; however, mechanisms are poorly understood.The PRogramming of Intergenerational Stress Mechanisms (PRISM) prospective pregnancy cohort characterized asthma history during pregnancy via questionnaires and quantified placental DNAm using the Illumina Infinium HumanMethylation450 BeadChip. We performed epigenome-wide association analyses (n = 223) to estimate associations between maternal active or inactive asthma, as compared to never asthma, and placental differentially methylated positions (DMPs) and differentially variable positions (DVPs). Models adjusted for maternal pre-pregnancy body mass index, smoking status, parity, age and education level and child sex. P-values were FDR-adjusted.One hundred and fifty-nine (71.3%) pregnant women reported no history of asthma (never asthma), 15 (6.7%) reported inactive, and 49 (22%) reported active antenatal asthma. Women predominantly self-identified as Black/Hispanic Black [88 (39.5%)] and Hispanic/non-Black [42 (18.8%)]. We identified 10 probes at FDR0.05 and 4 probes at FDR0.10 characterized by higher variability in maternal active asthma compared to never asthma mapping to GPX3, LHPP, PECAM1, ATAD3C, and ARHGEF4 and 2 probes characterized by lower variation mapping to CHMP4A and C5orf24. Amongst women with inactive asthma, we identified 52 probes, 41 at FDR0.05 and an additional 11 at FDR0.10, with higher variability compared to never asthma; BMP4, LHPP, PHYHIPL, and ZSCAN23 were associated with multiple DVPs. No associations were observed with DMPs.We observed alterations in placental DNAm in women with antenatal asthma, as compared to women without a history of asthma. Further research is needed to understand the impact on fetal development.
- Published
- 2022