4.7 Article

Association between serum concentrations of perfluoroalkyl substances and global DNA methylation levels in peripheral blood leukocytes of Japanese women: A cross-sectional study

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 859, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.159923

Keywords

Persistent organic pollutants; Epidemiology; Epigenetics; Perfluorochemicals; Fluorinated compounds; Isomer

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This study investigated the association between PFASs and global DNA methylation levels in leukocytes. It found that 13 PFASs were significantly associated with increased global DNA methylation levels in leukocytes, with an increase of 1.45%-3.96% per log10-unit increase of PFAS concentration.
Global DNA methylation levels in peripheral blood leukocytes can be a biomarker for cancer risk; however, levels can be changed by various factors such as environmental pollutants. We investigated the association between serum con-centrations of perfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) and global DNA methylation levels of leukocytes in a cross-sectional study using the control group of a Japanese breast cancer case-control study [397 women with a mean age of 54.1 (SD 10.1) years]. Importantly, our analysis distinguished branched PFAS isomers as different from linear isomers. The serum concentrations of 20 PFASs were measured by in-port arylation gas-chromatography negative chemical ioniza-tion mass spectrometry. Global DNA methylation levels in peripheral blood leukocytes were measured using a luminometric methylation assay. Associations between log10-transformed serum PFAS concentrations and global DNA methylation levels were evaluated by regression coefficients in multivariable robust linear regression analyses. Serum concentrations of 13 PFASs were significantly associated with increased global DNA methylation levels in leu-kocytes. Global DNA methylation was significantly increased by 1.45 %-3.96 % per log10-unit increase of serum PFAS concentration. Our results indicate that exposure to PFASs may increase global DNA methylation levels in peripheral blood leukocytes of Japanese women.

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