4.6 Article

Capturing sex-specific and hypofertility-linked effects of assisted reproductive technologies on the cord blood DNA methylome

Journal

CLINICAL EPIGENETICS
Volume 15, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13148-023-01497-7

Keywords

Assisted reproductive technology; Genomic imprinting; Sex specific; Infertility; Hypofertility; DNA methylation; Cord blood

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By analyzing the DNA methylome of 73 human cord blood samples, researchers found that assisted reproductive technology (ART) and hypofertility may lead to DNA methylation defects. The effects were more pronounced in female infants compared to male infants. Invasive ART techniques, such as in vitro fertilization and embryo culture, had a greater impact on cord blood DNA methylation patterns than less invasive procedures.
Background Children conceived through assisted reproduction are at an increased risk for growth and genomic imprinting disorders, often linked to DNA methylation defects. It has been suggested that assisted reproductive technology (ART) and underlying parental infertility can induce epigenetic instability, specifically interfering with DNA methylation reprogramming events during germ cell and preimplantation development. To date, human studies exploring the association between ART and DNA methylation defects have reported inconsistent or inconclusive results, likely due to population heterogeneity and the use of technologies with limited coverage of the epigenome. In our study, we explored the epigenetic risk of ART by comprehensively profiling the DNA methylome of 73 human cord blood samples of singleton pregnancies (n = 36 control group, n = 37 ART/hypofertile group) from a human prospective longitudinal birth cohort, the 3D (Design, Develop, Discover) Study, using a high-resolution sequencing-based custom capture panel that examines over 2.4 million autosomal CpGs in the genome. Results We identified evidence of sex-specific effects of ART/hypofertility on cord blood DNA methylation patterns. Our genome-wide analyses identified similar to 46% more CpGs affected by ART/hypofertility in female than in male infant cord blood. We performed a detailed analysis of three imprinted genes which have been associated with altered DNA methylation following ART (KCNQ1OT1, H19/IGF2 and GNAS) and found that female infant cord blood was associated with DNA hypomethylation. When compared to less invasive procedures such as intrauterine insemination, more invasive ARTs (in vitro fertilization, intracytoplasmic sperm injection, embryo culture) resulted in more marked and distinct effects on the cord blood DNA methylome. In the in vitro group, we found a close to fourfold higher proportion of significantly enriched Gene Ontology terms involved in development than in the in vivo group. Conclusions Our study highlights the ability of a sensitive, targeted, sequencing-based approach to uncover DNA methylation perturbations in cord blood associated with hypofertility and ART and influenced by offspring sex and ART technique invasiveness.

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