Prenatal parental tobacco smoking, gene specific DNA methylation, and newborns size: the Generation R study

Deleterious effects of prenatal tobacco smoking on fetal growth and newborn weight are well-established. One of the proposed mechanisms underlying this relationship is alterations in epigenetic programming. We selected 506 newborns from a population-based prospective birth cohort in the Netherlands....

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical epigenetics 2015-08, Vol.7 (1), p.83-83, Article 83
Hauptverfasser: Bouwland-Both, Marieke I, van Mil, Nina H, Tolhoek, Catharina P, Stolk, Lisette, Eilers, Paul H C, Verbiest, Michael M P J, Heijmans, Bastiaan T, Uitterlinden, André G, Hofman, Albert, van Ijzendoorn, Marinus H, Duijts, Liesbeth, de Jongste, Johan C, Tiemeier, Henning, Steegers, Eric A P, Jaddoe, Vincent W V, Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Deleterious effects of prenatal tobacco smoking on fetal growth and newborn weight are well-established. One of the proposed mechanisms underlying this relationship is alterations in epigenetic programming. We selected 506 newborns from a population-based prospective birth cohort in the Netherlands. Prenatal parental tobacco smoking was assessed using self-reporting questionnaires. Information on birth outcomes was obtained from medical records. The deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) methylation of the growth genes IGF2DMR and H19 was measured in newborn umbilical cord white blood cells. Associations were assessed between parental tobacco smoking and DNA methylation using linear mixed models and adjusted for potential confounders. The DNA methylation levels of IGF2DMR and H19 in the non-smoking group were median (90 % range), 54.0 % (44.6-62.0), and 30.0 % (25.5-34.0), in the first trimester only smoking group 52.2 % (44.5-61.1) and 30.8 % (27.1-34.1), and in the continued smoking group 51.6 % (43.9-61.3) and 30.2 % (23.7-34.8), respectively. Continued prenatal maternal smoking was inversely associated with IGF2DMR methylation (β = -1.03, 95 % CI -1.76; -0.30) in a dose-dependent manner (P-trend = 0.030). This association seemed to be slightly more profound among newborn girls (β = -1.38, 95 % CI -2.63; -0.14) than boys (β = -0.72, 95 % CI -1.68; 0.24). H19 methylation was also inversely associated continued smoking
ISSN:1868-7075
1868-7083
1868-7083
1868-7075
DOI:10.1186/s13148-015-0115-z