Long-term Air Pollution Exposure, Genome-wide DNA Methylation and Lung Function in the LifeLines Cohort Study

Ana Julia de F C Lichtenfels, Diana A van der Plaat, Kim de Jong, Cleo C van Diemen, Dirkje S Postma, Ivana Nedeljkovic, Cornelia M van Duijn, Najaf Amin, Sacha la Bastide-van Gemert, Maaike de Vries, Cavin K Ward-Caviness, Kathrin Wolf, Melanie Waldenberger, Annette Peters, Ronald P Stolk, Bert Brunekreef, H Marike Boezen, Judith M Vonk

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    Abstract

    BACKGROUND: Long-term air pollution exposure is negatively associated with lung function, yet the mechanisms underlying this association are not fully clear. Differential DNA methylation may explain this association.

    OBJECTIVES: Our main aim was to study the association between long-term air pollution exposure and DNA methylation.

    METHODS: We performed a genome-wide methylation study using robust linear regression models in 1,017 subjects from the LifeLines cohort study to analyze the association between exposure to nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and particulate matter (PM2.5, fine particulate matter with aerodynamic diameter ≤2.5 μm; PM10, particulate matter with aerodynamic diameter ≤10 μm) and PM2.5absorbance, indicator of elemental carbon content (estimated with land-use-regression models) with DNA methylation in whole blood (Illumina® HumanMethylation450K BeadChip). Replication of the top hits was attempted in two independent samples from the population-based Cooperative Health Research in the Region of Augsburg studies (KORA).

    RESULTS: Depending on the p-value threshold used, we found significant associations between NO2 exposure and DNA methylation for seven CpG sites (Bonferroni corrected threshold p<1.19×10-7) or for 4,980 CpG sites (False Discovery Rate<0.05). The top associated CpG site was annotated to the PSMB9 gene (i.e., cg04908668). None of the seven Bonferroni significant CpG-sites were significantly replicated in the two KORA-cohorts. No associations were found for PM exposure.

    CONCLUSIONS: Long-term NO2 exposure was genome-wide significantly associated with DNA methylation in the identification cohort but not in the replication cohort. Future studies are needed to further elucidate the potential mechanisms underlying NO2-exposure-related respiratory disease. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP2045.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number027004
    JournalEnvironmental Health Perspectives
    Volume126
    Issue number2
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 6 Feb 2018

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