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Maternal levels of endocrine disrupting chemicals in the first trimester of pregnancy are associated with infant cord blood DNA methylation.

Citation
Montrose, L., et al. “Maternal Levels Of Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals In The First Trimester Of Pregnancy Are Associated With Infant Cord Blood Dna Methylation.”. Epigenetics, pp. 301-309.
Center University of Michigan
Author Luke Montrose, Vasantha Padmanabhan, Jaclyn M Goodrich, Steven E Domino, Marjorie C Treadwell, John D Meeker, Deborah J Watkins, Dana C Dolinoy
Keywords BPA, DNA methylation, DOHaD, Toxicoepigenetics, Metabolism, phthalate
Abstract

Endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) pose a public health risk through disruption of normal biological processes. Identifying toxicoepigenetic mechanisms of developmental exposure-induced effects for EDCs, such as phthalates or bisphenol A (BPA), is essential. Here, we investigate whether maternal exposure to EDCs is predictive of infant DNA methylation at candidate gene regions. In the Michigan Mother-Infant Pairs (MMIP) cohort, DNA was extracted from cord blood leukocytes for methylation analysis by pyrosequencing (n = 116) and methylation changes related to first trimester levels of 9 phthalate metabolites and BPA. Growth and metabolism-related genes selected for methylation analysis included imprinted (IGF2, H19) and non-imprinted (PPARA, ESR1) genes along with LINE-1 repetitive elements. Findings revealed decreases in methylation of LINE-1, IGF2, and PPARA with increasing phthalate concentrations. For example, a log unit increase in ΣDEHP corresponded to a 1.03 [95% confidence interval (CI): -1.83, -0.22] percentage point decrease in PPARA methylation. Changes in DNA methylation were also inversely correlated with PPARA gene expression determined by RT-qPCR (r = -0.34, P = 0.02), thereby providing evidence in support of functional relevance. A sex-stratified analysis of EDCs and DNA methylation showed that some relationships were female-specific. For example, urinary BPA exposure was associated with a 1.35 (95%CI: -2.69, -0.01) percentage point decrease in IGF2 methylation and a 1.22 (95%CI: -2.27, -0.16) percentage point decrease in PPARA methylation in females only. These findings add to a body of evidence suggesting epigenetically labile regions may provide a conduit linking early exposures with disease risk later in life and that toxicoepigenetic susceptibility may be sex specific.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Epigenetics
Volume
13
Issue
3
Number of Pages
301-309
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1559-2308
DOI
10.1080/15592294.2018.1448680
Alternate Journal
Epigenetics
PMID
29513082
PMCID
PMC5997152
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