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

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2017

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Public Library of Science
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Mandaviya, P. R., R. Joehanes, D. Aïssi, B. Kühnel, R. E. Marioni, V. Truong, L. Stolk, et al. 2017. “Genetically defined elevated homocysteine levels do not result in widespread changes of DNA methylation in leukocytes.” PLoS ONE 12 (10): e0182472. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0182472. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0182472.

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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.

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Biology and life sciences, Cell biology, Chromosome biology, Chromatin, Chromatin modification, DNA methylation, Genetics, Epigenetics, Gene expression, DNA, DNA modification, Biochemistry, Nucleic acids, Physical Sciences, Chemistry, Chemical Reactions, Methylation, Mathematical and Statistical Techniques, Statistical Methods, Meta-Analysis, Mathematics, Statistics (Mathematics), Biology and Life Sciences, Molecular Genetics, Molecular Biology, Genetic Loci, Cell Biology, Cellular Types, Animal Cells, Blood Cells, White Blood Cells, Immune Cells, Immunology, Medicine and Health Sciences, Chromosome Biology, Chromosomes, Autosomes, Chromosome Pairs, Social Sciences, Sociology, Consortia

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