DNA Methylation Profiling of Placental Villi from Karyotypically Normal Miscarriage and Recurrent Miscarriage

Miscarriage occurs in 15% of clinical pregnancies. Although chromosomal errors are observed in >50%, causes of karyotypically normal losses are poorly understood. DNA methylation undergoes reprogramming during development and must be appropriately set to maintain a healthy pregnancy. We hypothesi...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American journal of pathology 2013-06, Vol.182 (6), p.2276-2284
Hauptverfasser: Hanna, Courtney W, McFadden, Deborah E, Robinson, Wendy P
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Miscarriage occurs in 15% of clinical pregnancies. Although chromosomal errors are observed in >50%, causes of karyotypically normal losses are poorly understood. DNA methylation undergoes reprogramming during development and must be appropriately set to maintain a healthy pregnancy. We hypothesize that aberrant DNA methylation may cause karyotypically normal miscarriage, particularly among women experiencing recurrent miscarriage (RM). DNA methylation in first-trimester chorionic villi was assessed in chromosomally normal miscarriages from women with RM ( N = 33) or isolated miscarriage (M; N = 21) and elective terminations (TA; N = 16). Differentially methylated candidate loci were identified using the Illumina Infinium HumanMethylation27 BeadChip array. Follow-up bisulfite pyrosequencing at promoter regions showed an increase in methylation in M compared with TA at cytochrome P450, subfamily 1A, polypeptide 2 ( CYP1A2 ; P = 0.002) and RM compared with TA at AXL receptor tyrosine kinase ( P = 0.02), and a decrease in RM and M compared with TA at defensin β 1 ( DEFB1 ; P = 0.008). Gene ontology analysis showed an enrichment of imprinted genes ( P = 9.53 × 10−10 ) and genes previously associated with RM ( P = 9.51 × 10−6 ). An increase of outliers at seven imprinted loci was observed in RM (3.9%) compared with M (0%) and TA (0.9%) ( P = 0.02), with increased average methylation at H19/IGF2 ICR1 in M samples ( P < 0.0001). Altered DNA methylation in the placenta at specific loci, and global dysregulation in specific cases, may contribute to or be a consequence of poor placental function in karyotypically normal miscarriage.
ISSN:0002-9440
1525-2191
DOI:10.1016/j.ajpath.2013.02.021