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Cigarette smoking reduces DNA methylation levels at multiple genomic loci but the effect is partially reversible upon cessation.

  • Loukia Tsaprouni
  • , Tsun-Po Yang
  • , Jordana Bell
  • , Katherine J. Dick
  • , Stavroula Kanoni
  • , James Nisbet
  • , Ana Viñuela
  • , Elin Grundberg
  • , Christopher P. Nelson
  • , Eshwar Meduri
  • , Alfonso Buil
  • , Francois Cambien
  • , Christian Hengstenberg
  • , Jeanette Erdmann
  • , Heribert Schunkert
  • , Alison H. Goodall
  • , Willem H. Ouwehand
  • , Emmanouil Dermitzakis
  • , Tim D. Spector
  • , Nilesh J. Samani
  • Panos Deloukas
    • Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute
    • University of Cambridge
    • King's College London
    • University of Leicester
    • Glenfield Hospital
    • William Harvey Research Institute
    • Queen Mary University of London
    • McGill University
    • Wellcome Trust
    • University of Geneva
    • Pierre and Marie Curie University
    • Klinik und Poliklinik für Innere Medizin II
    • University of Lübeck
    • German Centre for Cardiovascular Research
    • NHS Blood and Transplant
    • King Abdulaziz University

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    268 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Smoking is a major risk factor in many diseases. Genome wide association studies have linked genes for nicotine dependence and smoking behavior to increased risk of cardiovascular, pulmonary, and malignant diseases. We conducted an epigenome wide association study in peripheral-blood DNA in 464 individuals (22 current smokers and 263 ex-smokers), using the Human Methylation 450 K array. Upon replication in an independent sample of 356 twins (41 current and 104 ex-smokers), we identified 30 probes in 15 distinct loci, all of which reached genome-wide significance in the combined analysis P < 5 × 10(-8). All but one probe (cg17024919) remained significant after adjusting for blood cell counts. We replicated all 9 known loci and found an independent signal at CPOX near GPR15. In addition, we found 6 new loci at PRSS23, AVPR1B, PSEN2, LINC00299, RPS6KA2, and KIAA0087. Most of the lead probes (13 out of 15) associated with cigarette smoking, overlapped regions of open chromatin (FAIRE and DNaseI hypersensitive sites) or/and H3K27Ac peaks (ENCODE data set), which mark regulatory elements. The effect of smoking on DNA methylation was partially reversible upon smoking cessation for longer than 3 months. We report the first statistically significant interaction between a SNP (rs2697768) and cigarette smoking on DNA methylation (cg03329539). We provide evidence that the metSNP for cg03329539 regulates expression of the CHRND gene located circa 95 Kb downstream of the methylation site. Our findings suggest the existence of dynamic, reversible site-specific methylation changes in response to cigarette smoking , which may contribute to the extended health risks associated with cigarette smoking.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)1382-96
    JournalEpigenetics
    Volume9
    Issue number10
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 31 Oct 2014

    UN SDGs

    This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

    1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
      SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

    Keywords

    • CHRND
    • CPOX
    • DNA methylation
    • epigenome-wide screen
    • gene network
    • metQTLs
    • smoking

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