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Effect of maternal preconceptional and pregnancy micro-nutrient interventions on children’s DNA methylation: findings from the EMPHASIS study

Effect of maternal preconceptional and pregnancy micro-nutrient interventions on children’s DNA methylation: findings from the EMPHASIS study
Effect of maternal preconceptional and pregnancy micro-nutrient interventions on children’s DNA methylation: findings from the EMPHASIS study

Background: Maternal nutrition in pregnancy has been linked to offspring health in early and later life, with changes to DNA methylation (DNAm) proposed as a mediating mechanism. Objective: We investigated intervention-associated DNAm changes in children whose mothers participated in 2 randomized controlled trials of micronutrient supplementation before and during pregnancy, as part of the EMPHASIS (Epigenetic Mechanisms linking Preconceptional nutrition and Health Assessed in India and sub-Saharan Africa) study (ISRCTN14266771). Design: We conducted epigenome-wide association studies with blood samples from Indian (n = 698) and Gambian (n = 293) children using the Illumina EPIC array and a targeted study of selected loci not on the array. The Indian micronutrient intervention was food based, whereas the Gambian intervention was a micronutrient tablet. Results: We identified 6 differentially methylated CpGs in Gambians [2.5-5.0% reduction in intervention group, all false discovery rate (FDR) <5%], the majority mapping to ESM1, which also represented a strong signal in regional analysis. One CpG passed FDR <5% in the Indian cohort, but overall effect sizes were small (<1%) and did not have the characteristics of a robust signature. We also found strong evidence for enrichment of metastable epialleles among subthreshold signals in the Gambian analysis. This supports the notion that multiple methylation loci are influenced by micronutrient supplementation in the early embryo. Conclusions: Maternal preconceptional and pregnancy micronutrient supplementation may alter DNAm in children measured at 7-9 y. Multiple factors, including differences between the nature of the intervention, participants, and settings, are likely to have contributed to the lack of replication in the Indian cohort. Potential links to phenotypic outcomes will be explored in the next stage of the EMPHASIS study.

DNA methylation, RCT, epigenetics, epigenome-wide association study, micronutrient intervention
0002-9165
1099–1113
Saffari, Ayden
586ef334-e08f-4ca0-b2f6-575a453d5fa3
Shrestha, Smeeta
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Issarapu, Prachand
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Sajjadi, Sara
1604756a-372f-410f-8f35-3f5e28181531
Betts, Modupeh
78d7f425-c9f6-4daf-a435-a589ac014155
Sahariah, Sirazul Ameen
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Tomar, Ashutosh Singh
ec110068-8719-4e7c-a909-d31708c01394
James, Philip
13400610-2831-4c76-9333-03ca9174fc39
Dedaniya, Akshay
02a2cbdf-c16b-47c4-a254-f1c24dd2e6ea
Yadav, Dilip K.
eedf8cb6-a5d1-486f-aeab-140ef6e731fa
Kumaran, Kalyanaraman
de6f872c-7339-4a52-be84-e3bbae707744
Prentice, Andrew M.
6b851f61-f989-48f6-8109-9a7408254728
Lillycrop, Karen
eeaaa78d-0c4d-4033-a178-60ce7345a2cc
Fall, Caroline
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Chandak, Giriraj R.
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Silver, Matt J.
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EMPHASIS Study Group
Saffari, Ayden
586ef334-e08f-4ca0-b2f6-575a453d5fa3
Shrestha, Smeeta
a1317ac1-6da8-4f72-8ae0-770f5ab253a3
Issarapu, Prachand
f980880e-53a1-477d-affc-7a2f7328504b
Sajjadi, Sara
1604756a-372f-410f-8f35-3f5e28181531
Betts, Modupeh
78d7f425-c9f6-4daf-a435-a589ac014155
Sahariah, Sirazul Ameen
42a476ec-07d5-413d-97cb-28e7cd5af15f
Tomar, Ashutosh Singh
ec110068-8719-4e7c-a909-d31708c01394
James, Philip
13400610-2831-4c76-9333-03ca9174fc39
Dedaniya, Akshay
02a2cbdf-c16b-47c4-a254-f1c24dd2e6ea
Yadav, Dilip K.
eedf8cb6-a5d1-486f-aeab-140ef6e731fa
Kumaran, Kalyanaraman
de6f872c-7339-4a52-be84-e3bbae707744
Prentice, Andrew M.
6b851f61-f989-48f6-8109-9a7408254728
Lillycrop, Karen
eeaaa78d-0c4d-4033-a178-60ce7345a2cc
Fall, Caroline
7171a105-34f5-4131-89d7-1aa639893b18
Chandak, Giriraj R.
d9d4d4ba-6a4b-450d-8889-02e599ca0e1c
Silver, Matt J.
b80ecb7f-b011-4f37-9b9a-d0c63f1979c4

Saffari, Ayden, Shrestha, Smeeta, Issarapu, Prachand, Sajjadi, Sara, Betts, Modupeh, Sahariah, Sirazul Ameen, Tomar, Ashutosh Singh, James, Philip, Dedaniya, Akshay, Yadav, Dilip K., Kumaran, Kalyanaraman, Prentice, Andrew M., Lillycrop, Karen, Fall, Caroline, Chandak, Giriraj R. and Silver, Matt J. , EMPHASIS Study Group (2020) Effect of maternal preconceptional and pregnancy micro-nutrient interventions on children’s DNA methylation: findings from the EMPHASIS study. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 112 (4), 1099–1113. (doi:10.1093/ajcn/nqaa193).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Maternal nutrition in pregnancy has been linked to offspring health in early and later life, with changes to DNA methylation (DNAm) proposed as a mediating mechanism. Objective: We investigated intervention-associated DNAm changes in children whose mothers participated in 2 randomized controlled trials of micronutrient supplementation before and during pregnancy, as part of the EMPHASIS (Epigenetic Mechanisms linking Preconceptional nutrition and Health Assessed in India and sub-Saharan Africa) study (ISRCTN14266771). Design: We conducted epigenome-wide association studies with blood samples from Indian (n = 698) and Gambian (n = 293) children using the Illumina EPIC array and a targeted study of selected loci not on the array. The Indian micronutrient intervention was food based, whereas the Gambian intervention was a micronutrient tablet. Results: We identified 6 differentially methylated CpGs in Gambians [2.5-5.0% reduction in intervention group, all false discovery rate (FDR) <5%], the majority mapping to ESM1, which also represented a strong signal in regional analysis. One CpG passed FDR <5% in the Indian cohort, but overall effect sizes were small (<1%) and did not have the characteristics of a robust signature. We also found strong evidence for enrichment of metastable epialleles among subthreshold signals in the Gambian analysis. This supports the notion that multiple methylation loci are influenced by micronutrient supplementation in the early embryo. Conclusions: Maternal preconceptional and pregnancy micronutrient supplementation may alter DNAm in children measured at 7-9 y. Multiple factors, including differences between the nature of the intervention, participants, and settings, are likely to have contributed to the lack of replication in the Indian cohort. Potential links to phenotypic outcomes will be explored in the next stage of the EMPHASIS study.

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Accepted/In Press date: 22 June 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 5 September 2020
Published date: 1 October 2020
Additional Information: Copyright © The Author(s) on behalf of the American Society for Nutrition 2020.
Keywords: DNA methylation, RCT, epigenetics, epigenome-wide association study, micronutrient intervention

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 442145
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/442145
ISSN: 0002-9165
PURE UUID: 23d1d033-9efb-4997-9f9a-6e77f41fc9ee
ORCID for Karen Lillycrop: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7350-5489
ORCID for Caroline Fall: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4402-5552

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Date deposited: 07 Jul 2020 16:54
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 05:42

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Contributors

Author: Ayden Saffari
Author: Smeeta Shrestha
Author: Prachand Issarapu
Author: Sara Sajjadi
Author: Modupeh Betts
Author: Sirazul Ameen Sahariah
Author: Ashutosh Singh Tomar
Author: Philip James
Author: Akshay Dedaniya
Author: Dilip K. Yadav
Author: Andrew M. Prentice
Author: Karen Lillycrop ORCID iD
Author: Caroline Fall ORCID iD
Author: Giriraj R. Chandak
Author: Matt J. Silver
Corporate Author: EMPHASIS Study Group

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