4.5 Article

Air pollution and gene-specific methylation in the Normative Aging Study

Journal

EPIGENETICS
Volume 9, Issue 3, Pages 448-458

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.4161/epi.27584

Keywords

air pollution; traffic; gene-specific DNA methylation; effect modification; mediation analysis; elderly

Funding

  1. US Environmental Protection Agency [EPA RD-827353, RD-832416]
  2. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) [RO1-ES015172, 2RO1-ES015172, ES014663, ES00002, PO1-ES008925]
  3. Clean Air Act (CLARC) grant [RD83479701]
  4. Medical Research Council-UK [G1002296]
  5. Cooperative Studies Program/Epidemiology Research and Information Center of the US. Department of Veterans Affairs and is a component of the Massachusetts Veterans Epidemiology Research and Information Center, Boston, Massachusetts
  6. Medical Research Council [G1002296] Funding Source: researchfish
  7. MRC [G1002296] Funding Source: UKRI

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The mechanisms by which air pollution has multiple systemic effects in humans are not fully elucidated, but appear to include inflammation and thrombosis. This study examines whether concentrations of ozone and components of fine particle mass are associated with changes in methylation on tissue factor (F3), interferon gamma (IFN-), interleukin 6 (IL-6), toll-like receptor 2 (TLR-2), and intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1). We investigated associations between air pollution exposure and gene-specific methylation in 777 elderly men participating in the Normative Aging Study (1999-2009). We repeatedly measured methylation at multiple CpG sites within each gene's promoter region and calculated the mean of the position-specific measurements. We examined intermediate-term associations between primary and secondary air pollutants and mean methylation and methylation at each position with distributed-lag models. Increase in air pollutants concentrations was significantly associated with F3, ICAM-1, and TLR-2 hypomethylation, and IFN- and IL-6 hypermethylation. An interquartile range increase in black carbon concentration averaged over the four weeks prior to assessment was associated with a 12% reduction in F3 methylation (95% CI: -17% to -6%). For some genes, the change in methylation was observed only at specific locations within the promoter region. DNA methylation may reflect biological impact of air pollution. We found some significant mediated effects of black carbon on fibrinogen through a decrease in F3 methylation, and of sulfate and ozone on ICAM-1 protein through a decrease in ICAM-1 methylation.

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