Smoking affects epigenetic ageing of lung bronchoalveolar lavage cells in Multiple Sclerosis

•Epigenetic age estimations vary depending on which clock is used.•Lung BAL cells of pwMS display accelerated AltumAge epigenetic ageing compared to controls.•Faster AltumAge ageing in pwMS vs. controls could not be found in blood monocytes.•Smoking affects BAL epigenetic age in pwMS, specifically.•...

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Veröffentlicht in:Multiple sclerosis and related disorders 2023-11, Vol.79, p.104991, Article 104991
Hauptverfasser: Klose, Dennis, Needhamsen, Maria, Ringh, Mikael V., Hagemann-Jensen, Michael, Jagodic, Maja, Kular, Lara
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Epigenetic age estimations vary depending on which clock is used.•Lung BAL cells of pwMS display accelerated AltumAge epigenetic ageing compared to controls.•Faster AltumAge ageing in pwMS vs. controls could not be found in blood monocytes.•Smoking affects BAL epigenetic age in pwMS, specifically.•Smoking-related effect relies on molecular changes of inflammation-related genes. A compelling body of evidence implicates cigarette smoking and lung inflammation in Multiple Sclerosis (MS) susceptibility and progression. Previous studies have reported epigenetic age (DNAm age) acceleration in blood immune cells and in glial cells of people with MS (pwMS) compared to healthy controls (HC). We aimed to examine biological ageing in lung immune cells in the context of MS and smoking. We analyzed age acceleration residuals in lung bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) cells, constituted of mainly alveolar macrophages, from 17 pwMS and 22 HC in relation to smoking using eight DNA methylation-based clocks, namely AltumAge, Horvath, GrimAge, PhenoAge, Zhang, SkinBlood, Hannum, Monocyte clock as well as two RNA-based clocks, which capture different aspects of biological ageing. After adjustment for covariates, five epigenetic clocks showed significant differences between the groups. Four of them, Horvath (Padj = 0.028), GrimAge (Padj = 4.28 × 10−7), SkinBlood (Padj = 0.001) and Zhang (Padj = 0.02), uncovered the sole effect of smoking on ageing estimates, irrespective of the clinical group. The Horvath, SkinBlood and Zhang clocks showed a negative impact of smoking while GrimAge detected smoking-associated age acceleration in BAL cells. On the contrary, the AltumAge clock revealed differences between pwMS and HC and indicated that, in the absence of smoking, BAL cells of pwMS were epigenetically 5.4 years older compared to HC (Padj = 0.028). Smoking further affected epigenetic ageing in BAL cells of pwMS specifically as non-smoking pwMS exhibited a 10.2-year AltumAge acceleration compared to pwMS smokers (Padj = 0.0049). Of note, blood-derived monocytes did not show any MS-specific or smoking-related AltumAge differences. The difference between BAL cells of pwMS smokers and non-smokers was attributable to the differential methylation of 114 AltumAge-CpGs (Padj 
ISSN:2211-0348
2211-0356
2211-0356
DOI:10.1016/j.msard.2023.104991