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Childhood DNA methylation as a marker of early life rapid weight gain and subsequent overweight

Lookup NU author(s): Natassia Robinson, Dr Heather BrownORCiD, Professor Mark PearceORCiD, Professor Caroline Relton, Dr Viviana AlbaniORCiD, Dr Jill McKay

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0).


Abstract

Background High early postnatal weight gain has been associated with childhood adiposity, however the mechanism remains unknown. DNA methylation is a hypothesised mechanism linking early life exposures and subsequent disease. However, epigenetic changes associated with high early weight gain have not previously been investigated. Our aim was to investigate the associations between early weight gain, peripheral blood DNA methylation, and subsequent overweight/obese. Data from the UK Avon Longitudinal study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC) cohort were used to estimate associations between early postnatal weight gain and epigenome-wide DNA CpG site methylation (Illumina 450K Methylation Beadchip) in blood in childhood (n= 125) and late adolescence (n= 96). High weight gain in the first year (a change in weight z‐scores >0.67), both unconditional (rapid weight gain) and conditional on birthweight (rapid thrive), were related to individual CpG site methylation and across regions using the meffil pipeline, with and without adjustment for cell type proportions, and with 5% false discovery rate correction. Variation in methylation at high weight gain associated CpG sites were then examined with regards to body composition measures in childhood and adolescence. Replication of the differentially methylated CpG sites was sought using whole-blood DNA samples from 104 children from the UK Southampton Women’s Survey. Results Rapid infant weight gain was associated with small (+1% change) increases in childhood methylation (age 7) for two distinct CpG sites (cg01379158 (NT5M) and cg11531579 (CHFR)). Childhood methylation at one of these CpGs (cg11531579) was also higher in those who experienced rapid weight gain and were subsequently overweight/obese in adolescence (age 17). Rapid weight gain was not associated with differential DNA methylation in adolescence. Childhood methylation at the cg11531579 site was also suggestively associated with rapid weight gain in the replication cohort. Conclusions This study identified associations between rapid weight gain in infancy and small increases in childhood methylation at two CpG sites, one of which was replicated and was also associated with subsequent overweight/obese. It will be important to determine whether loci are markers of early rapid weight gain across different, larger populations. The mechanistic relevance of these differentially methylated sites requires further investigation.


Publication metadata

Author(s): Robinson N, Brown H, Antoun E, Godfrey KM, Hanson MA, Lilycrop KA, Crozier SR, Murray R, Pearce MS, Relton CL, Albani V, McKay JA

Publication type: Article

Publication status: Published

Journal: Clinical Epigenetics

Year: 2021

Volume: 13

Online publication date: 12/01/2021

Acceptance date: 19/10/2020

Date deposited: 22/10/2020

ISSN (electronic): 1868-7083

Publisher: BioMed Central Ltd

URL: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13148-020-00952-z

DOI: 10.1186/s13148-020-00952-z


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Funding

Funder referenceFunder name
217065/Z/19/Z
BB/I025751/1
BB/I025263/1
BB/M011186/1
MC_UU_00011/5

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