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Hypomethylation of Serum Blood Clot DNA, but Not Plasma EDTA-Blood Cell Pellet DNA, from Vitamin B12-Deficient Subjects

Vitamin B12, a co-factor in methyl-group transfer, is important in maintaining DNA (deoxycytidine) methylation. Using two independent assays we examined the effect of vitamin B12-deficiency (plasma vitamin B12<148 pmol/L) on DNA methylation in women of childbearing age. Coagulated blood clot DNA...

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Autores principales: Quinlivan, Eoin P., Crider, Krista S., Zhu, Jiang-Hui, Maneval, David R., Hao, Ling, Li, Zhu, Rasmussen, Sonja A., Berry, R. J., Bailey, Lynn B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3681792/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23785415
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0065241
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author Quinlivan, Eoin P.
Crider, Krista S.
Zhu, Jiang-Hui
Maneval, David R.
Hao, Ling
Li, Zhu
Rasmussen, Sonja A.
Berry, R. J.
Bailey, Lynn B.
author_facet Quinlivan, Eoin P.
Crider, Krista S.
Zhu, Jiang-Hui
Maneval, David R.
Hao, Ling
Li, Zhu
Rasmussen, Sonja A.
Berry, R. J.
Bailey, Lynn B.
author_sort Quinlivan, Eoin P.
collection PubMed
description Vitamin B12, a co-factor in methyl-group transfer, is important in maintaining DNA (deoxycytidine) methylation. Using two independent assays we examined the effect of vitamin B12-deficiency (plasma vitamin B12<148 pmol/L) on DNA methylation in women of childbearing age. Coagulated blood clot DNA from vitamin B12-deficient women had significantly (p<0.001) lower percentage deoxycytidine methylation (3.23±0.66%; n = 248) and greater [3 H]methyl-acceptance (42,859±9,699 cpm; n = 17) than DNA from B12-replete women (4.44±0.18%; n = 128 and 26,049±2,814 cpm; n = 11) [correlation between assays: r = –0.8538; p<0.001; n = 28]. In contrast, uncoagulated EDTA-blood cell pellet DNA from vitamin B12-deficient and B12-replete women exhibited similar percentage methylation (4.45±0.15%; n = 77 vs. 4.47±0.15%; n = 47) and [3 H]methyl-acceptance (27,378±4,094 cpm; n = 17 vs. 26,610±2,292 cpm; n = 11). Therefore, in simultaneously collected paired blood samples, vitamin B12-deficiency was associated with decreased DNA methylation only in coagulated samples. These findings highlight the importance of sample collection methods in epigenetic studies, and the potential impact biological processes can have on DNA methylation during collection.
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spelling pubmed-36817922013-06-19 Hypomethylation of Serum Blood Clot DNA, but Not Plasma EDTA-Blood Cell Pellet DNA, from Vitamin B12-Deficient Subjects Quinlivan, Eoin P. Crider, Krista S. Zhu, Jiang-Hui Maneval, David R. Hao, Ling Li, Zhu Rasmussen, Sonja A. Berry, R. J. Bailey, Lynn B. PLoS One Research Article Vitamin B12, a co-factor in methyl-group transfer, is important in maintaining DNA (deoxycytidine) methylation. Using two independent assays we examined the effect of vitamin B12-deficiency (plasma vitamin B12<148 pmol/L) on DNA methylation in women of childbearing age. Coagulated blood clot DNA from vitamin B12-deficient women had significantly (p<0.001) lower percentage deoxycytidine methylation (3.23±0.66%; n = 248) and greater [3 H]methyl-acceptance (42,859±9,699 cpm; n = 17) than DNA from B12-replete women (4.44±0.18%; n = 128 and 26,049±2,814 cpm; n = 11) [correlation between assays: r = –0.8538; p<0.001; n = 28]. In contrast, uncoagulated EDTA-blood cell pellet DNA from vitamin B12-deficient and B12-replete women exhibited similar percentage methylation (4.45±0.15%; n = 77 vs. 4.47±0.15%; n = 47) and [3 H]methyl-acceptance (27,378±4,094 cpm; n = 17 vs. 26,610±2,292 cpm; n = 11). Therefore, in simultaneously collected paired blood samples, vitamin B12-deficiency was associated with decreased DNA methylation only in coagulated samples. These findings highlight the importance of sample collection methods in epigenetic studies, and the potential impact biological processes can have on DNA methylation during collection. Public Library of Science 2013-06-13 /pmc/articles/PMC3681792/ /pubmed/23785415 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0065241 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Quinlivan, Eoin P.
Crider, Krista S.
Zhu, Jiang-Hui
Maneval, David R.
Hao, Ling
Li, Zhu
Rasmussen, Sonja A.
Berry, R. J.
Bailey, Lynn B.
Hypomethylation of Serum Blood Clot DNA, but Not Plasma EDTA-Blood Cell Pellet DNA, from Vitamin B12-Deficient Subjects
title Hypomethylation of Serum Blood Clot DNA, but Not Plasma EDTA-Blood Cell Pellet DNA, from Vitamin B12-Deficient Subjects
title_full Hypomethylation of Serum Blood Clot DNA, but Not Plasma EDTA-Blood Cell Pellet DNA, from Vitamin B12-Deficient Subjects
title_fullStr Hypomethylation of Serum Blood Clot DNA, but Not Plasma EDTA-Blood Cell Pellet DNA, from Vitamin B12-Deficient Subjects
title_full_unstemmed Hypomethylation of Serum Blood Clot DNA, but Not Plasma EDTA-Blood Cell Pellet DNA, from Vitamin B12-Deficient Subjects
title_short Hypomethylation of Serum Blood Clot DNA, but Not Plasma EDTA-Blood Cell Pellet DNA, from Vitamin B12-Deficient Subjects
title_sort hypomethylation of serum blood clot dna, but not plasma edta-blood cell pellet dna, from vitamin b12-deficient subjects
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3681792/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23785415
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0065241
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