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The nasal methylome and childhood atopic asthma

Authors :
Rana Tawil Misiak
Carolyn M. Kercsmar
Adam J. Richards
Stanley J. Szefler
Cynthia M. Visness
Rebecca Z. Krouse
Melanie M. Makhija
Christine A. Sorkness
Corinne E. Hennessy
Allen D. Stevens
George T. O'Connor
Andrew H. Liu
Meyer Kattan
Elizabeth J. Davidson
Christena A. Kolakowski
William W. Busse
Rebecca S. Gruchalla
Richard J. Martin
Alkis Togias
Brent S. Pedersen
Gurjit K. Khurana Hershey
Ivana V. Yang
Dinesh K. Pillai
David A. Schwartz
Source :
Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology. 139:1478-1488
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2017.

Abstract

Background Given the strong environmental influence on both epigenetic marks and allergic asthma in children, the epigenetic alterations in respiratory epithelia might provide insight into allergic asthma. Objective We sought to identify DNA methylation and gene expression changes associated with childhood allergic persistent asthma. Methods We compared genomic DNA methylation patterns and gene expression in African American children with persistent atopic asthma (n = 36) versus healthy control subjects (n = 36). Results were validated in an independent population of asthmatic children (n = 30) by using a shared healthy control population (n = 36) and in an independent population of white adult atopic asthmatic patients (n = 12) and control subjects (n = 12). Results We identified 186 genes with significant methylation changes, differentially methylated regions or differentially methylated probes, after adjustment for age, sex, race/ethnicity, batch effects, inflation, and multiple comparisons. Genes differentially methylated included those with established roles in asthma and atopy and genes related to extracellular matrix, immunity, cell adhesion, epigenetic regulation, and airflow obstruction. The methylation changes were substantial (median, 9.5%; range, 2.6% to 29.5%). Hypomethylated and hypermethylated genes were associated with increased and decreased gene expression, respectively ( P −6 for differentially methylated regions and P −10 for differentially methylated probes). Quantitative analysis in 53 differentially expressed genes demonstrated that 32 (60%) have significant methylation-expression relationships within 5 kb of the gene. Ten loci selected based on the relevance to asthma, magnitude of methylation change, and methylation-expression relationships were validated in an independent cohort of children with atopic asthma. Sixty-seven of 186 genes also have significant asthma-associated methylation changes in nasal epithelia of adult white asthmatic patients. Conclusions Epigenetic marks in respiratory epithelia are associated with allergic asthma and gene expression changes in inner-city children.

Details

ISSN :
00916749
Volume :
139
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....483d10901dd9ba8441e410ac25b3238d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaci.2016.07.036