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Genetically defined elevated homocysteine levels do not result in widespread changes of DNA methylation in leukocytes.

Authors :
Pooja R Mandaviya
Roby Joehanes
Dylan Aïssi
Brigitte Kühnel
Riccardo E Marioni
Vinh Truong
Lisette Stolk
Marian Beekman
Marc Jan Bonder
Lude Franke
Christian Gieger
Tianxiao Huan
M Arfan Ikram
Sonja Kunze
Liming Liang
Jan Lindemans
Chunyu Liu
Allan F McRae
Michael M Mendelson
Martina Müller-Nurasyid
Annette Peters
P Eline Slagboom
John M Starr
David-Alexandre Trégouët
André G Uitterlinden
Marleen M J van Greevenbroek
Diana van Heemst
Maarten van Iterson
Philip S Wells
Chen Yao
Ian J Deary
France Gagnon
Bastiaan T Heijmans
Daniel Levy
Pierre-Emmanuel Morange
Melanie Waldenberger
Sandra G Heil
Joyce B J van Meurs
CHARGE Consortium Epigenetics group and BIOS Consortium
Source :
PLoS ONE, Vol 12, Iss 10, p e0182472 (2017)
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2017.

Abstract

BACKGROUND:DNA methylation is affected by the activities of the key enzymes and intermediate metabolites of the one-carbon pathway, one of which involves homocysteine. We investigated the effect of the well-known genetic variant associated with mildly elevated homocysteine: MTHFR 677C>T independently and in combination with other homocysteine-associated variants, on genome-wide leukocyte DNA-methylation. METHODS:Methylation levels were assessed using Illumina 450k arrays on 9,894 individuals of European ancestry from 12 cohort studies. Linear-mixed-models were used to study the association of additive MTHFR 677C>T and genetic-risk score (GRS) based on 18 homocysteine-associated SNPs, with genome-wide methylation. RESULTS:Meta-analysis revealed that the MTHFR 677C>T variant was associated with 35 CpG sites in cis, and the GRS showed association with 113 CpG sites near the homocysteine-associated variants. Genome-wide analysis revealed that the MTHFR 677C>T variant was associated with 1 trans-CpG (nearest gene ZNF184), while the GRS model showed association with 5 significant trans-CpGs annotated to nearest genes PTF1A, MRPL55, CTDSP2, CRYM and FKBP5. CONCLUSIONS:Our results do not show widespread changes in DNA-methylation across the genome, and therefore do not support the hypothesis that mildly elevated homocysteine is associated with widespread methylation changes in leukocytes.

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine
Science

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
12
Issue :
10
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
PLoS ONE
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.894904b6bef47d19d0b9de51287e06e
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0182472