Epigenetic Gene Promoter Methylation at Birth Is Associated With Child’s Later Adiposity

Author:

Godfrey Keith M.123,Sheppard Allan45,Gluckman Peter D.46,Lillycrop Karen A.1,Burdge Graham C.1,McLean Cameron45,Rodford Joanne13,Slater-Jefferies Joanne L.1,Garratt Emma13,Crozier Sarah R.2,Emerald B. Starling6,Gale Catharine R.2,Inskip Hazel M.2,Cooper Cyrus23,Hanson Mark A.13

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Developmental Sciences, University of Southampton, Southampton University Hospitals NHS Trust, U.K.

2. MRC Lifecourse Epidemiology Unit, University of Southampton, Southampton University Hospitals NHS Trust, U.K.

3. NIHR Nutrition, Diet and Lifestyle Biomedical Research Unit, University of Southampton, Southampton University Hospitals NHS Trust, Southampton, U.K.

4. Liggins Institute, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand

5. AgResearch, New Zealand

6. Singapore Institute of Clinical Sciences, Singapore, Singapore

Abstract

OBJECTIVE Fixed genomic variation explains only a small proportion of the risk of adiposity. In animal models, maternal diet alters offspring body composition, accompanied by epigenetic changes in metabolic control genes. Little is known about whether such processes operate in humans. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Using Sequenom MassARRAY we measured the methylation status of 68 CpGs 5′ from five candidate genes in umbilical cord tissue DNA from healthy neonates. Methylation varied greatly at particular CpGs: for 31 CpGs with median methylation ≥5% and a 5–95% range ≥10%, we related methylation status to maternal pregnancy diet and to child’s adiposity at age 9 years. Replication was sought in a second independent cohort. RESULTS In cohort 1, retinoid X receptor-α (RXRA) chr9:136355885+ and endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) chr7:150315553+ methylation had independent associations with sex-adjusted childhood fat mass (exponentiated regression coefficient [β] 17% per SD change in methylation [95% CI 4–31], P = 0.009, n = 64, and β = 20% [9–32], P < 0.001, n = 66, respectively) and %fat mass (β = 10% [1–19], P = 0.023, n = 64 and β =12% [4–20], P = 0.002, n = 66, respectively). Regression analyses including sex and neonatal epigenetic marks explained >25% of the variance in childhood adiposity. Higher methylation of RXRA chr9:136355885+, but not of eNOS chr7:150315553+, was associated with lower maternal carbohydrate intake in early pregnancy, previously linked with higher neonatal adiposity in this population. In cohort 2, cord eNOS chr7:150315553+ methylation showed no association with adiposity, but RXRA chr9:136355885+ methylation showed similar associations with fat mass and %fat mass (β = 6% [2–10] and β = 4% [1–7], respectively, both P = 0.002, n = 239). CONCLUSIONS Our findings suggest a substantial component of metabolic disease risk has a prenatal developmental basis. Perinatal epigenetic analysis may have utility in identifying individual vulnerability to later obesity and metabolic disease.

Publisher

American Diabetes Association

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

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