4.6 Article

DNA methylation profiles in the blood of newborn term infants born to mothers with obesity

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 17, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0267946

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)
  2. Foundation grant from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research [FDN-148368]
  3. Mount Sinai Hospital, Mount Sinai Hospital Foundation
  4. Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute
  5. ALSPAC: The UK Medical Research Council [102215/2/13/2]
  6. University of Bristol - Wellcome Trust
  7. MRC [076467/Z/05/Z]
  8. BBSRC [BBI025751/1, BB/I025263/1]
  9. IEU [MC_UU_12013/1, MC_UU_12013/2, MC_UU_12013/8, R01HD068437, 5RO1AI121226-02]
  10. CONTAMED EU [212502]
  11. Mount Sinai Hospital
  12. Mount Sinai Hospital Foundation
  13. Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute
  14. ALSPAC: The UK Medical Research Council
  15. Wellcome
  16. University of Bristol
  17. Wellcome Trust
  18. MRC
  19. BBSRC
  20. IEU
  21. National Institute of Child and Human
  22. NIH
  23. CONTAMED EU collaborative Project grant

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Maternal obesity is a risk factor for childhood obesity and metabolic diseases in offspring. This study examined DNA methylation patterns in infants born to mothers with normal BMI and obesity, and found differential methylation regions associated with gene regulation. The findings support the developmental origins of health and disease paradigm, suggesting that adverse prenatal exposures can influence health trajectories.
Maternal obesity is an important risk factor for childhood obesity and influences the prevalence of metabolic diseases in offspring. As childhood obesity is influenced by postnatal factors, it is critical to determine whether children born to women with obesity during pregnancy show alterations that are detectable at birth. Epigenetic mechanisms such as DNA methylation modifications have been proposed to mediate prenatal programming. We investigated DNA methylation signatures in male and female infants from mothers with a normal Body Mass Index (BMI 18.5-24.9 kg/m(2)) compared to mothers with obesity (BMI >= 30 kg/m(2)). BMI was measured during the first prenatal visit from women recruited into the Ontario Birth Study (OBS) at Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto, ON, Canada. DNA was extracted from neonatal dried blood spots collected from heel pricks obtained 24 hours after birth at term (total n = 40) from women with a normal BMI and women with obesity matched for parity, age, and neonatal sex. Reduced representation bisulfite sequencing was used to identify genomic loci associated with differentially methylated regions (DMRs) in CpG-dense regions most likely to influence gene regulation. DMRs were predominantly localized to intergenic regions and gene bodies, with only 9% of DMRs localized to promoter regions. Genes associated with DMRs were compared to those from a large publicly available cohort study, the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC; total n = 859). Hypergeometric tests revealed a significant overlap in genes associated with DMRs in the OBS and ALSPAC cohorts. PTPRN2, a gene involved in insulin secretion, and MAD1L1, which plays a role in the cell cycle and tumor suppression, contained DMRs in males and females in both cohorts. In males, KEGG pathway analysis revealed significant overrepresentation of genes involved in endocytosis and pathways in cancer, including IGF1R, which was previously shown to respond to diet-induced metabolic stress in animal models and in lymphocytes in the context of childhood obesity. These preliminary findings are consistent with Developmental Origins of Health and Disease paradigm, which posits that adverse prenatal exposures set developmental health trajectories.

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