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Paternal Tobacco Smoke Correlated to Offspring Asthma and Prenatal Epigenetic Programming

Rationale: Little is known about effects of paternal tobacco smoke (PTS) on the offspring’s asthma and its prenatal epigenetic programming. Objective: To investigate whether PTS exposure was associated with the offspring’s asthma and correlated to epigenetic CG methylation of potential tobacco-relat...

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Autores principales: Wu, Chih-Chiang, Hsu, Te-Yao, Chang, Jen-Chieh, Ou, Chia-Yu, Kuo, Ho-Chang, Liu, Chieh-An, Wang, Chih-Lu, Chuang, Hau, Chen, Chie-Pein, Yang, Kuender D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6554446/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31214241
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2019.00471
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author Wu, Chih-Chiang
Hsu, Te-Yao
Chang, Jen-Chieh
Ou, Chia-Yu
Kuo, Ho-Chang
Liu, Chieh-An
Wang, Chih-Lu
Chuang, Hau
Chen, Chie-Pein
Yang, Kuender D.
author_facet Wu, Chih-Chiang
Hsu, Te-Yao
Chang, Jen-Chieh
Ou, Chia-Yu
Kuo, Ho-Chang
Liu, Chieh-An
Wang, Chih-Lu
Chuang, Hau
Chen, Chie-Pein
Yang, Kuender D.
author_sort Wu, Chih-Chiang
collection PubMed
description Rationale: Little is known about effects of paternal tobacco smoke (PTS) on the offspring’s asthma and its prenatal epigenetic programming. Objective: To investigate whether PTS exposure was associated with the offspring’s asthma and correlated to epigenetic CG methylation of potential tobacco-related immune genes: LMO2, GSTM1 or/and IL-10 genes. Measurements and Main Results: In a birth cohort of 1,629 newborns, we measured exposure rates of PTS (23%) and maternal tobacco smoke (MTS, 0.2%), cord blood DNA methylation, infant respiratory tract infection, childhood DNA methylation, and childhood allergic diseases. Infants with prenatal PTS exposure had a significantly higher risk of asthma by the age of 6 than those without (p = 0.026). The PTS exposure doses at 0, <20, and ≧20 cigarettes per day were significantly associated with the trend of childhood asthma and the increase of LMO2-E148 (p = 0.006), and IL10_P325 (p = 0.008) CG methylation. The combination of higher CG methylation levels of LMO2_E148, IL10_P325, and GSTM1_P266 corresponded to the highest risk of asthma by 43.48%, compared to other combinations (16.67–23.08%) in the 3-way multi-factor dimensionality reduction (MDR) analysis. The LMO2_P794 and GSTM1_P266 CG methylation levels at age 0 were significantly correlated to those at age of 6. Conclusions: Prenatal PTS exposure increases CG methylation contents of immune genes, such as LMO2 and IL-10, which significantly retained from newborn stage to 6 years of age and correlated to development of childhood asthma. Modulation of the LMO2 and IL-10 CG methylation and/or their gene expression may provide a regimen for early prevention of PTS-associated childhood asthma. Descriptor number: 1.10 Asthma Mediators. Scientific Knowledge on the Subject: It has been better known that maternal tobacco smoke (MTS) has an impact on the offspring’s asthma via epigenetic modification. Little is known about effects of paternal tobacco smoke (PTS) on the offspring’s asthma and its prenatal epigenetic programming. What This Study Adds to the Field: Prenatal tobacco smoke (PTS) can program epigenetic modifications in certain genes, such as LMO2 and IL-10, and that these modifications are correlated to childhood asthma development. The higher the PTS exposure dose the higher the CG methylation levels are found. The combination of higher CG methylation levels of LMO2_E148, IL10_P325 and GSTM1_P266 corresponded to the highest risk of asthma. Measuring the DNA methylation levels of certain genes might help to predict high-risk populations for childhood asthma and provide a potential target to prevent the development of childhood asthma.
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spelling pubmed-65544462019-06-18 Paternal Tobacco Smoke Correlated to Offspring Asthma and Prenatal Epigenetic Programming Wu, Chih-Chiang Hsu, Te-Yao Chang, Jen-Chieh Ou, Chia-Yu Kuo, Ho-Chang Liu, Chieh-An Wang, Chih-Lu Chuang, Hau Chen, Chie-Pein Yang, Kuender D. Front Genet Genetics Rationale: Little is known about effects of paternal tobacco smoke (PTS) on the offspring’s asthma and its prenatal epigenetic programming. Objective: To investigate whether PTS exposure was associated with the offspring’s asthma and correlated to epigenetic CG methylation of potential tobacco-related immune genes: LMO2, GSTM1 or/and IL-10 genes. Measurements and Main Results: In a birth cohort of 1,629 newborns, we measured exposure rates of PTS (23%) and maternal tobacco smoke (MTS, 0.2%), cord blood DNA methylation, infant respiratory tract infection, childhood DNA methylation, and childhood allergic diseases. Infants with prenatal PTS exposure had a significantly higher risk of asthma by the age of 6 than those without (p = 0.026). The PTS exposure doses at 0, <20, and ≧20 cigarettes per day were significantly associated with the trend of childhood asthma and the increase of LMO2-E148 (p = 0.006), and IL10_P325 (p = 0.008) CG methylation. The combination of higher CG methylation levels of LMO2_E148, IL10_P325, and GSTM1_P266 corresponded to the highest risk of asthma by 43.48%, compared to other combinations (16.67–23.08%) in the 3-way multi-factor dimensionality reduction (MDR) analysis. The LMO2_P794 and GSTM1_P266 CG methylation levels at age 0 were significantly correlated to those at age of 6. Conclusions: Prenatal PTS exposure increases CG methylation contents of immune genes, such as LMO2 and IL-10, which significantly retained from newborn stage to 6 years of age and correlated to development of childhood asthma. Modulation of the LMO2 and IL-10 CG methylation and/or their gene expression may provide a regimen for early prevention of PTS-associated childhood asthma. Descriptor number: 1.10 Asthma Mediators. Scientific Knowledge on the Subject: It has been better known that maternal tobacco smoke (MTS) has an impact on the offspring’s asthma via epigenetic modification. Little is known about effects of paternal tobacco smoke (PTS) on the offspring’s asthma and its prenatal epigenetic programming. What This Study Adds to the Field: Prenatal tobacco smoke (PTS) can program epigenetic modifications in certain genes, such as LMO2 and IL-10, and that these modifications are correlated to childhood asthma development. The higher the PTS exposure dose the higher the CG methylation levels are found. The combination of higher CG methylation levels of LMO2_E148, IL10_P325 and GSTM1_P266 corresponded to the highest risk of asthma. Measuring the DNA methylation levels of certain genes might help to predict high-risk populations for childhood asthma and provide a potential target to prevent the development of childhood asthma. Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-05-31 /pmc/articles/PMC6554446/ /pubmed/31214241 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2019.00471 Text en Copyright © 2019 Wu, Hsu, Chang, Ou, Kuo, Liu, Wang, Chuang, Chen and Yang. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Genetics
Wu, Chih-Chiang
Hsu, Te-Yao
Chang, Jen-Chieh
Ou, Chia-Yu
Kuo, Ho-Chang
Liu, Chieh-An
Wang, Chih-Lu
Chuang, Hau
Chen, Chie-Pein
Yang, Kuender D.
Paternal Tobacco Smoke Correlated to Offspring Asthma and Prenatal Epigenetic Programming
title Paternal Tobacco Smoke Correlated to Offspring Asthma and Prenatal Epigenetic Programming
title_full Paternal Tobacco Smoke Correlated to Offspring Asthma and Prenatal Epigenetic Programming
title_fullStr Paternal Tobacco Smoke Correlated to Offspring Asthma and Prenatal Epigenetic Programming
title_full_unstemmed Paternal Tobacco Smoke Correlated to Offspring Asthma and Prenatal Epigenetic Programming
title_short Paternal Tobacco Smoke Correlated to Offspring Asthma and Prenatal Epigenetic Programming
title_sort paternal tobacco smoke correlated to offspring asthma and prenatal epigenetic programming
topic Genetics
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6554446/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31214241
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2019.00471
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