4.6 Article

Accelerated DNA methylation age plays a role in the impact of cardiovascular risk factors on the human heart

Journal

CLINICAL EPIGENETICS
Volume 15, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13148-023-01576-9

Keywords

Advanced electrocardiography; Aging; DNA methylation age

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This study investigates the relationship between DNAm age and A-ECG heart age, and finds that DNAm AgeAccel is associated with cardiovascular risk factors. The results suggest that participants with accelerated DNA methylation at the age of 60 may have older, weaker, and more electrically impaired hearts. Furthermore, the harmful effects of cardiovascular risk factors on cardiac age and health may be partially mediated by DNAm AgeAccel.
Background DNA methylation (DNAm) age acceleration (AgeAccel) and cardiac age by 12-lead advanced electrocardiography (A-ECG) are promising biomarkers of biological and cardiac aging, respectively. We aimed to explore the relationships between DNAm age and A-ECG heart age and to understand the extent to which DNAm AgeAccel relates to cardiovascular (CV) risk factors in a British birth cohort from 1946.Results We studied four DNAm ages (AgeHannum, AgeHorvath, PhenoAge, and GrimAge) and their corresponding AgeAccel. Outcomes were the results from two publicly available ECG-based cardiac age scores: the Bayesian A-ECG-based heart age score of Lindow et al. 2022 and the deep neural network (DNN) ECG-based heart age score of Ribeiro et al. 2020. DNAm AgeAccel was also studied relative to results from two logistic regression-based A-ECG disease scores, one for left ventricular (LV) systolic dysfunction (LVSD), and one for LV electrical remodeling (LVER). Generalized linear models were used to explore the extent to which any associations between biological cardiometabolic risk factors (body mass index, hypertension, diabetes, high cholesterol, previous cardiovascular disease [CVD], and any CV risk factor) and the ECG-based outcomes are mediated by DNAm AgeAccel. We derived the total effects, average causal mediation effects (ACMEs), average direct effects (ADEs), and the proportion mediated [PM] with their 95% confidence intervals [CIs]. 498 participants (all 60-64 years) were included, with the youngest ECG heart age being 27 and the oldest 90. When exploring the associations between cardiometabolic risk factors and Bayesian A-ECG cardiac age, AgeAccelPheno appears to be a partial mediator, as ACME was 0.23 years [0.01, 0.52] p = 0.028 (i.e., PM approximate to 18%) for diabetes, 0.34 [0.03, 0.74] p = 0.024 (i.e., PM approximate to 15%) for high cholesterol, and 0.34 [0.03, 0.74] p = 0.024 (PM approximate to 15%) for any CV risk factor. Similarly, AgeAccelGrim mediates approximate to 30% of the relationship between diabetes or high cholesterol and the DNN ECG-based heart age. When exploring the link between cardiometabolic risk factors and the A-ECG-based LVSD and LVER scores, it appears that AgeAccelPheno or AgeAccelGrim mediate 10-40% of these associations.Conclusion By the age of 60, participants with accelerated DNA methylation appear to have older, weaker, and more electrically impaired hearts. We show that the harmful effects of CV risk factors on cardiac age and health, appear to be partially mediated by DNAm AgeAccelPheno and AgeAccelGrim. This highlights the need to further investigate the potential cardioprotective effects of selective DNA methyltransferases modulators.

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