Cargando…

The Effect of Tobacco Smoking Differs across Indices of DNA Methylation-Based Aging in an African American Sample: DNA Methylation-Based Indices of Smoking Capture These Effects

Smoking is one of the leading preventable causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide, prompting interest in its association with DNA methylation-based measures of biological aging. Considerable progress has been made in developing DNA methylation-based measures that correspond to self-reported smok...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Lei, Man-Kit, Gibbons, Frederick X., Simons, Ronald L., Philibert, Robert A., Beach, Steven R. H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7140795/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32183340
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes11030311
_version_ 1783519070548656128
author Lei, Man-Kit
Gibbons, Frederick X.
Simons, Ronald L.
Philibert, Robert A.
Beach, Steven R. H.
author_facet Lei, Man-Kit
Gibbons, Frederick X.
Simons, Ronald L.
Philibert, Robert A.
Beach, Steven R. H.
author_sort Lei, Man-Kit
collection PubMed
description Smoking is one of the leading preventable causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide, prompting interest in its association with DNA methylation-based measures of biological aging. Considerable progress has been made in developing DNA methylation-based measures that correspond to self-reported smoking status. In addition, assessment of DNA methylation-based aging has been expanded to better capture individual differences in risk for morbidity and mortality. Untested to date, however, is whether smoking is similarly related to older and newer indices of DNA methylation-based aging, and whether DNA methylation-based indices of smoking can be used in lieu of self-reported smoking to examine effects on DNA methylation-based aging measures. In the current investigation we examine mediation of the impact of self-reported cigarette consumption on accelerated, intrinsic DNA methylation-based aging using indices designed to predict chronological aging, phenotypic aging, and mortality risk, as well as a newly developed DNA methylation-based measure of telomere length. Using a sample of 500 African American middle aged smokers and non-smokers, we found that a) self-reported cigarette consumption was associated with accelerated intrinsic DNA methylation-based aging on some but not all DNA methylation-based aging indices, b) for those aging outcomes associated with self-reported cigarette consumption, DNA methylation-based indicators of smoking typically accounted for greater variance than did self-reported cigarette consumption, and c) self-reported cigarette consumption effects on DNA methylation-based aging indices typically were fully mediated by DNA methylation-based indicators of smoking (e.g., PACKYRS from GrimAge; or cg05575921 CpG site). Results suggest that when DNA methylation-based indices of smoking are substituted for self-reported assessments of smoking, they will typically fully reflect the varied impact of cigarette smoking on intrinsic, accelerated DNA methylation-based aging.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7140795
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-71407952020-04-10 The Effect of Tobacco Smoking Differs across Indices of DNA Methylation-Based Aging in an African American Sample: DNA Methylation-Based Indices of Smoking Capture These Effects Lei, Man-Kit Gibbons, Frederick X. Simons, Ronald L. Philibert, Robert A. Beach, Steven R. H. Genes (Basel) Article Smoking is one of the leading preventable causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide, prompting interest in its association with DNA methylation-based measures of biological aging. Considerable progress has been made in developing DNA methylation-based measures that correspond to self-reported smoking status. In addition, assessment of DNA methylation-based aging has been expanded to better capture individual differences in risk for morbidity and mortality. Untested to date, however, is whether smoking is similarly related to older and newer indices of DNA methylation-based aging, and whether DNA methylation-based indices of smoking can be used in lieu of self-reported smoking to examine effects on DNA methylation-based aging measures. In the current investigation we examine mediation of the impact of self-reported cigarette consumption on accelerated, intrinsic DNA methylation-based aging using indices designed to predict chronological aging, phenotypic aging, and mortality risk, as well as a newly developed DNA methylation-based measure of telomere length. Using a sample of 500 African American middle aged smokers and non-smokers, we found that a) self-reported cigarette consumption was associated with accelerated intrinsic DNA methylation-based aging on some but not all DNA methylation-based aging indices, b) for those aging outcomes associated with self-reported cigarette consumption, DNA methylation-based indicators of smoking typically accounted for greater variance than did self-reported cigarette consumption, and c) self-reported cigarette consumption effects on DNA methylation-based aging indices typically were fully mediated by DNA methylation-based indicators of smoking (e.g., PACKYRS from GrimAge; or cg05575921 CpG site). Results suggest that when DNA methylation-based indices of smoking are substituted for self-reported assessments of smoking, they will typically fully reflect the varied impact of cigarette smoking on intrinsic, accelerated DNA methylation-based aging. MDPI 2020-03-14 /pmc/articles/PMC7140795/ /pubmed/32183340 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes11030311 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Lei, Man-Kit
Gibbons, Frederick X.
Simons, Ronald L.
Philibert, Robert A.
Beach, Steven R. H.
The Effect of Tobacco Smoking Differs across Indices of DNA Methylation-Based Aging in an African American Sample: DNA Methylation-Based Indices of Smoking Capture These Effects
title The Effect of Tobacco Smoking Differs across Indices of DNA Methylation-Based Aging in an African American Sample: DNA Methylation-Based Indices of Smoking Capture These Effects
title_full The Effect of Tobacco Smoking Differs across Indices of DNA Methylation-Based Aging in an African American Sample: DNA Methylation-Based Indices of Smoking Capture These Effects
title_fullStr The Effect of Tobacco Smoking Differs across Indices of DNA Methylation-Based Aging in an African American Sample: DNA Methylation-Based Indices of Smoking Capture These Effects
title_full_unstemmed The Effect of Tobacco Smoking Differs across Indices of DNA Methylation-Based Aging in an African American Sample: DNA Methylation-Based Indices of Smoking Capture These Effects
title_short The Effect of Tobacco Smoking Differs across Indices of DNA Methylation-Based Aging in an African American Sample: DNA Methylation-Based Indices of Smoking Capture These Effects
title_sort effect of tobacco smoking differs across indices of dna methylation-based aging in an african american sample: dna methylation-based indices of smoking capture these effects
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7140795/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32183340
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes11030311
work_keys_str_mv AT leimankit theeffectoftobaccosmokingdiffersacrossindicesofdnamethylationbasedaginginanafricanamericansamplednamethylationbasedindicesofsmokingcapturetheseeffects
AT gibbonsfrederickx theeffectoftobaccosmokingdiffersacrossindicesofdnamethylationbasedaginginanafricanamericansamplednamethylationbasedindicesofsmokingcapturetheseeffects
AT simonsronaldl theeffectoftobaccosmokingdiffersacrossindicesofdnamethylationbasedaginginanafricanamericansamplednamethylationbasedindicesofsmokingcapturetheseeffects
AT philibertroberta theeffectoftobaccosmokingdiffersacrossindicesofdnamethylationbasedaginginanafricanamericansamplednamethylationbasedindicesofsmokingcapturetheseeffects
AT beachstevenrh theeffectoftobaccosmokingdiffersacrossindicesofdnamethylationbasedaginginanafricanamericansamplednamethylationbasedindicesofsmokingcapturetheseeffects
AT leimankit effectoftobaccosmokingdiffersacrossindicesofdnamethylationbasedaginginanafricanamericansamplednamethylationbasedindicesofsmokingcapturetheseeffects
AT gibbonsfrederickx effectoftobaccosmokingdiffersacrossindicesofdnamethylationbasedaginginanafricanamericansamplednamethylationbasedindicesofsmokingcapturetheseeffects
AT simonsronaldl effectoftobaccosmokingdiffersacrossindicesofdnamethylationbasedaginginanafricanamericansamplednamethylationbasedindicesofsmokingcapturetheseeffects
AT philibertroberta effectoftobaccosmokingdiffersacrossindicesofdnamethylationbasedaginginanafricanamericansamplednamethylationbasedindicesofsmokingcapturetheseeffects
AT beachstevenrh effectoftobaccosmokingdiffersacrossindicesofdnamethylationbasedaginginanafricanamericansamplednamethylationbasedindicesofsmokingcapturetheseeffects