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Trends in DNA methylation over time between parous and nulliparous young women

Trends in DNA methylation over time between parous and nulliparous young women
Trends in DNA methylation over time between parous and nulliparous young women
Background/objectives: the experience of pregnancy and parturition has been associated with long-term health effects in mothers, imparting protective effects against some diseases while the risk of other diseases is increased. The mechanisms that drive these altered disease risks are unknown. This study examined DNA methylation (DNAm) changes from pre-pregnancy to several years after giving birth in parous women compared to nulliparous controls over the same time interval.

Methods: using 180 parous-associated CpGs, three analyses were carried out to test DNAm changes from pre-pregnancy at age 18 years to gestation; from gestation to post-pregnancy at age 26 years in parous women; and from 18 to 26 years in nulliparous women using linear mixed models with repeated measures.
Results: the directions of DNAm changes were the same between the parous and nulliparous groups. Most CpG dinucleotides (67%, 121 of 180) had a decreasing trend while a small number (7%, 13 of 180) had an increasing trend. Of the CpGs showing increasing or decreasing DNAm, approximately half had DNAm change to a smaller extent in parous women and the other half changed more in parous women than nulliparous controls. 9% (17 of 180) changed significantly in nulliparous women only, leading to a significant difference in DNAm levels in parous women at the post-pregnancy 26 years time point.

Conclusions: pregnancy and parturition may accelerate methylation changes in some CpGs, but slow down or halt methylation changes over time in other CpGs.
CpG, DNAm, gestation, nulliparous, parous, parturition, pregnancy
2075-4655
Chen, Su
66e5d980-713f-46c5-9264-38c3600c77ab
Holloway, John W.
4bbd77e6-c095-445d-a36b-a50a72f6fe1a
Karmaus, Wilfried
281d0e53-6b5d-4d38-9732-3981b07cd853
Zhang, Hongmei
9f774048-54d6-4321-a252-3887b2c76db0
Arshad, S. Hasan
917e246d-2e60-472f-8d30-94b01ef28958
Ewart, Susan
28667421-3cf7-43d7-b1c3-ca27564938f7
Chen, Su
66e5d980-713f-46c5-9264-38c3600c77ab
Holloway, John W.
4bbd77e6-c095-445d-a36b-a50a72f6fe1a
Karmaus, Wilfried
281d0e53-6b5d-4d38-9732-3981b07cd853
Zhang, Hongmei
9f774048-54d6-4321-a252-3887b2c76db0
Arshad, S. Hasan
917e246d-2e60-472f-8d30-94b01ef28958
Ewart, Susan
28667421-3cf7-43d7-b1c3-ca27564938f7

Chen, Su, Holloway, John W., Karmaus, Wilfried, Zhang, Hongmei, Arshad, S. Hasan and Ewart, Susan (2025) Trends in DNA methylation over time between parous and nulliparous young women. Epigenomes, 9 (3), [24]. (doi:10.3390/epigenomes9030024).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background/objectives: the experience of pregnancy and parturition has been associated with long-term health effects in mothers, imparting protective effects against some diseases while the risk of other diseases is increased. The mechanisms that drive these altered disease risks are unknown. This study examined DNA methylation (DNAm) changes from pre-pregnancy to several years after giving birth in parous women compared to nulliparous controls over the same time interval.

Methods: using 180 parous-associated CpGs, three analyses were carried out to test DNAm changes from pre-pregnancy at age 18 years to gestation; from gestation to post-pregnancy at age 26 years in parous women; and from 18 to 26 years in nulliparous women using linear mixed models with repeated measures.
Results: the directions of DNAm changes were the same between the parous and nulliparous groups. Most CpG dinucleotides (67%, 121 of 180) had a decreasing trend while a small number (7%, 13 of 180) had an increasing trend. Of the CpGs showing increasing or decreasing DNAm, approximately half had DNAm change to a smaller extent in parous women and the other half changed more in parous women than nulliparous controls. 9% (17 of 180) changed significantly in nulliparous women only, leading to a significant difference in DNAm levels in parous women at the post-pregnancy 26 years time point.

Conclusions: pregnancy and parturition may accelerate methylation changes in some CpGs, but slow down or halt methylation changes over time in other CpGs.

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epigenomes-09-00024-v3 - Version of Record
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 5 July 2025
Published date: 10 July 2025
Keywords: CpG, DNAm, gestation, nulliparous, parous, parturition, pregnancy

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 505313
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505313
ISSN: 2075-4655
PURE UUID: 7c06e1cf-3fd9-4246-a67b-8efb4d69beda
ORCID for John W. Holloway: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9998-0464

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Date deposited: 07 Oct 2025 16:31
Last modified: 08 Oct 2025 01:36

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Contributors

Author: Su Chen
Author: Wilfried Karmaus
Author: Hongmei Zhang
Author: S. Hasan Arshad
Author: Susan Ewart

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