Published June 25, 2014 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Prenatal Tobacco Smoke Exposure Is Associated with Childhood DNA CpG Methylation

  • 1. University of Southern California
  • 2. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
  • 3. Harvard University
  • 4. Norwegian Institute of Public Health
  • 5. University of Chicago
  • 6. Johns Hopkins University
  • 7. University of Arizona
  • 8. National Jewish Health
  • 9. University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • 10. Washington University in St. Louis

Description

Background: Smoking while pregnant is associated with a myriad of negative health outcomes in the child. Some of the detrimental effects may be due to epigenetic modifications, although few studies have investigated this hypothesis in detail.

Objectives: To characterize site-specific epigenetic modifications conferred by prenatal smoking exposure within asthmatic children.

Methods: Using Illumina HumanMethylation27 microarrays, we estimated the degree of methylation at 27,578 distinct DNA sequences located primarily in gene promoters using whole blood DNA samples from the Childhood Asthma Management Program (CAMP) subset of Asthma BRIDGE childhood asthmatics (n = 527) ages 5–12 with prenatal smoking exposure data available. Using beta-regression, we screened loci for differential methylation related to prenatal smoke exposure, adjusting for gender, age and clinical site, and accounting for multiple comparisons by FDR.

Results: Of 27,578 loci evaluated, 22,131 (80%) passed quality control assessment and were analyzed. Sixty-five children (12%) had a history of prenatal smoke exposure. At an FDR of 0.05, we identified 19 CpG loci significantly associated with prenatal smoke, of which two replicated in two independent populations. Exposure was associated with a 2% increase in mean CpG methylation in FRMD4A (p = 0.01) and Cllorf52 (p = 0.001) compared to no exposure. Four additional genes, XPNPEP1, PPEF2, SMPD3 and CRYGN, were nominally associated in at least one replication group.

Conclusions: These data suggest that prenatal exposure to tobacco smoke is associated with reproducible epigenetic changes that persist well into childhood. However, the biological significance of these altered loci remains unknown.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0099716
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:10554

Funding

National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute
U01 HL075419
National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute
U01 HL65899
National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute
P01 HL083069
National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute
R01 HL 086601
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
5RC2HL101543-02
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
5P30ES007048
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
1K01ES017801
Norwegian Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Education and Research
NO-ES-75558
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
UO1 NS 047537-01
Norwegian Research Council
151918/S10
Unknown funder
Mary Beryl Patch Turnbull Scholar Program

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Human Genetics