Characterizing genetic influences on DNA methylation (DNAm) provides an opportunity to understand mechanisms underpinning gene regulation and disease. In the present study, we describe results of DNAm quantitative trait locus (mQTL) analyses on 32,851 participants, identifying genetic variants associated with DNAm at 420,509 DNAm sites in blood. We present a database of >270,000 independent mQTLs, of which 8.5% comprise long-range (trans) associations. Identified mQTL associations explain 15-17% of the additive genetic variance of DNAm. We show that the genetic architecture of DNAm levels is highly polygenic. Using shared genetic control between distal DNAm sites, we constructed networks, identifying 405 discrete genomic communities enriched for genomic annotations and complex traits. Shared genetic variants are associated with both DNAm levels and complex diseases, but only in a minority of cases do these associations reflect causal relationships from DNAm to trait or vice versa, indicating a more complex genotype-phenotype map than previously anticipated.(Extended Data Fig. 5). These results show the value of large sample sizes in blood to detect trans-mQTLs regardless of the tissue. Trans-mQTL SNPs and DNAm exhibit patterned TF binding.Recent studies have uncovered multiple types of transcription factor (TF)-DNA interactions influenced by DNAm, including the binding of DNAm-sensitive TFs [26][27][28] and cooperativity between TFs 27,29 . To gain insights into how SNPs induce long-range DNAm changes, we mapped enrichments for DNAm sites and SNPs across binding sites for 171 TFs in 27 cell types 30,31 . We found strong enrichments for most TFs and cell types among DNAm sites with a trans association (cis + trans: 55%; trans only: 80%; cis only: 18%) and among cis-acting SNPs (cis only: 96%, cis + trans: 91%, trans only: 1%; Fig. 2b, Supplementary Tables 7 and 8, and Supplementary Figs. 22 and 23). Consistent with the observation that trans-only DNAm sites are enriched for CpG islands (Supplementary Fig. 13), DNAm sites that overlap TF-binding sites (TFBSs) were relatively hypomethylated (weighted mean DNAm levels = 21% versus 52%, P < 2.2 × 10 −16 ; Supplementary Fig. 24).Next, we hypothesized that, if a trans-mQTL is driven by TF activity 8,10 , then particular TF-TF pairs may exhibit preferential enrichment 32 . An mQTL has a pair of TFBS annotations 31 , one for the SNP and one for the DNAm site. We evaluated whether the annotation pairs among 18,584 interchromosomal trans-mQTLs were associated with TF binding in a nonrandom pattern (Supplementary Note and Extended Data Fig. 6a,b). We found that 6.1% (22,962 of 378,225) of possible pairwise combinations of SNP-DNAm site annotations were more over-or underrepresented than expected by chance after strict multiple testing correction (Supplementary Note, Supplementary Table 9 and Extended Data Fig. 6c).After accounting for abundance and other characteristics, the strongest pairwise enrichments involved sites close to TFBSs for proteins in the cohesin complex, ...
Background: Epigenetic mechanisms, including methylation, can contribute to childhood asthma. Identifying DNA methylation profiles in asthmatic patients can inform disease pathogenesis. Objective: We sought to identify differential DNA methylation in newborns and children related to childhood asthma. Methods: Within the Pregnancy And Childhood Epigenetics consortium, we performed epigenome-wide meta-analyses of school-age asthma in relation to CpG methylation (Illumina450K) in blood measured either in newborns, in prospective analyses, or cross-sectionally in school-aged children. We also identified differentially methylated regions. Results: In newborns (8 cohorts, 668 cases), 9 CpGs (and 35 regions) were differentially methylated (epigenome-wide significance, false discovery rate < 0.05) in relation to asthma development. In a cross-sectional meta-analysis of asthma and methylation in children (9 cohorts, 631 cases), we identified 179 CpGs (false discovery rate < 0.05) and 36 differentially methylated regions. In replication studies of methylation in other tissues, most of the 179 CpGs discovered in blood replicated, despite smaller sample sizes, in studies of nasal respiratory epithelium or eosinophils. Pathway analyses highlighted enrichment for asthma-relevant immune processes and overlap in pathways enriched both in newborns and children. Gene expression correlated with methylation at most loci. Functional annotation supports a regulatory effect on gene expression at many asthma-associated CpGs. Several implicated genes are targets for approved or experimental drugs, including IL5RA and KCNH2. Conclusion: Novel loci differentially methylated in newborns represent potential biomarkers of risk of asthma by school age. Cross-sectional associations in children can reflect both risk for and effects of disease. Asthma-related differential methylation in blood in children was substantially replicated in eosinophils and respiratory epithelium. (J Allergy Clin Immunol 2019;143:2062-74.)
Pre-pregnancy maternal obesity is associated with adverse offspring outcomes at birth and later in life. Individual studies have shown that epigenetic modifications such as DNA methylation could contribute. Within the Pregnancy and Childhood Epigenetics (PACE) Consortium, we meta-analysed the association between pre-pregnancy maternal BMI and methylation at over 450,000 sites in newborn blood DNA, across 19 cohorts (9,340 mother-newborn pairs). We attempted to infer causality by comparing the effects of maternal versus paternal BMI and incorporating genetic variation. In four additional cohorts (1,817 mother-child pairs), we meta-analysed the association between maternal BMI at the start of pregnancy and blood methylation in adolescents. In newborns, maternal BMI was associated with small (<0.2% per BMI unit (1 kg/m2), P < 1.06 × 10−7) methylation variation at 9,044 sites throughout the genome. Adjustment for estimated cell proportions greatly attenuated the number of significant CpGs to 104, including 86 sites common to the unadjusted model. At 72/86 sites, the direction of the association was the same in newborns and adolescents, suggesting persistence of signals. However, we found evidence for a6causal intrauterine effect of maternal BMI on newborn methylation at just 8/86 sites. In conclusion, this well-powered analysis identified robust associations between maternal adiposity and variations in newborn blood DNA methylation, but these small effects may be better explained by genetic or lifestyle factors than a causal intrauterine mechanism. This highlights the need for large-scale collaborative approaches and the application of causal inference techniques in epigenetic epidemiology.
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