4.8 Article

The early-life exposome and epigenetic age acceleration in children

Journal

ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL
Volume 155, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envint.2021.106683

Keywords

Aging; Epigenetic age acceleration; Pregnancy; Childhood; Environmental exposures

Funding

  1. European Community [308333, 874583]
  2. European Union [733206]
  3. Welcome Trust [WT101597MA]
  4. UK Medical Research Council (MRC)
  5. Economic and Social Science Research Council (ESRC) [MR/N024397/1]
  6. Instituto de Salud Carlos III, CIBERESP
  7. Generalitat de Catalunya-CIRIT
  8. Lithuanian Agency for Science Innovation and Technology [6-04-2014_31V-66]
  9. Norwegian Ministry of Health and Care Services
  10. Ministry of Education and Research
  11. European project (EU FP6-2003-Food-3-NewGeneris)
  12. European project (EU FP6. STREP Hiwate)
  13. European project (EU FP7 ENV.2007.1.2.2.2.) [211250 Escape]
  14. European project (EU FP7-2008-ENV-1.2.1.4 Envirogenomarkers)
  15. European project (EU FP7-HEALTH-2009-single stage CHICOS)
  16. European project (EU FP7 ENV.2008.1.2.1.6.) [226285 ENRIECO]
  17. European project (EU-FP7-HEALTH-2012) [308333 HELIX]
  18. Greek Ministry of Health
  19. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation through the Centro de Excelencia Severo Ochoa 2019-2023 Program [CEX2018-000806-S]
  20. Generalitat de Catalunya through CERCA Program
  21. UKRI Future Leaders Fellowship [MR/S03532X/1]
  22. FI fellowship from the Catalan Government [016FI_B 00272]
  23. Instituto Carlos III (Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness) [CD12/00563, MS16/00128]
  24. FI fellowship from the Catalan Government (FIDGR 2015)

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The study investigated the association between over 100 prenatal and childhood exposures and epigenetic age acceleration in 7-year-old children. Maternal smoking during pregnancy and childhood exposure to indoor particulate matter absorbance (PMabs) were nominally associated with increased age acceleration, while exposure to organic pesticide and persistent pollutant were protective. None of the associations remained significant after multiple-testing correction.
The early-life exposome influences future health and accelerated biological aging has been proposed as one of the underlying biological mechanisms. We investigated the association between more than 100 exposures assessed during pregnancy and in childhood (including indoor and outdoor air pollutants, built environment, green environments, tobacco smoking, lifestyle exposures, and biomarkers of chemical pollutants), and epigenetic age acceleration in 1,173 children aged 7 years old from the Human Early-Life Exposome project. Age acceleration was calculated based on Horvath's Skin and Blood clock using child blood DNA methylation measured by Infinium HumanMethylation450 BeadChips. We performed an exposure-wide association study between prenatal and childhood exposome and age acceleration. Maternal tobacco smoking during pregnancy was nominally associated with increased age acceleration. For childhood exposures, indoor particulate matter absorbance (PMabs) and parental smoking were nominally associated with an increase in age acceleration. Exposure to the organic pesticide dimethyl dithiophosphate and the persistent pollutant polychlorinated biphenyl-138 (inversely associated with child body mass index) were protective for age acceleration. None of the associations remained significant after multiple-testing correction. Pregnancy and childhood exposure to tobacco smoke and childhood exposure to indoor PMabs may accelerate epigenetic aging from an early age.

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