LáShauntá Glover, Adam G Lilly, Anne E Justice, Annie Green Howard, Brooke S Staley, Yujie Wang, Helen M Kamens, Kendra Ferrier, Jan Bressler, Laura Loehr, Laura M Raffield, Mario Sims, Kari E North, Lindsay Fernández-Rhodes
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Obesity and poverty disproportionally affect African American persons. Epigenetic mechanisms could partially explain the association between socioeconomic disadvantage and body mass index (BMI). We examined the extent to which epigenetic mechanisms mediate the effect of socioeconomic status (SES) on BMI. Using data from African American adults from the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) Study (n = 2664, mean age = 57 years), education, income, and occupation were used to create a composite SES score at visit 1 (1987-1989). We conducted two methylation-wide association analyses to identify associations between SES (visit 1), BMI and cytosine-phosphate-guanine (CpG) sites measured at a subsequent visit (1990-1995). We then utilized structural equation modeling (SEM) to test whether identified sites mediated the association between earlier SES and BMI in sex-stratified models adjusted for demographic and risk factor covariates. Independent replication and meta-analyses were conducted using the Jackson Heart Study (JHS, n = 874, mean age 51 years, 2000-2004). Three CpG sites near MAD1L1, KDM2B, and SOCS3 (cg05095590, cg1370865, and cg18181703) were suggestively associated (P-value < 1.3×10-5) in ARIC and at array-wide significance (P-value < 1.3×10-7) in a combined meta-analysis of ARIC with JHS. SEM of these three sites revealed significant indirect effects in females (P-value < 5.8×10-3), each mediating 7%-20% of the total effect of SES on BMI. Nominally significant indirect effects were observed for two sites near MAD1L1 and KDM2B in males (P-value < 3.4×10-2), mediating -17 and -22% of the SES-BMI effect. These results provide further evidence that epigenetic modifications may be a potential pathway through which SES may "get under the skin" and contribute to downstream health disparities.
期刊介绍:
Human Molecular Genetics concentrates on full-length research papers covering a wide range of topics in all aspects of human molecular genetics. These include:
the molecular basis of human genetic disease
developmental genetics
cancer genetics
neurogenetics
chromosome and genome structure and function
therapy of genetic disease
stem cells in human genetic disease and therapy, including the application of iPS cells
genome-wide association studies
mouse and other models of human diseases
functional genomics
computational genomics
In addition, the journal also publishes research on other model systems for the analysis of genes, especially when there is an obvious relevance to human genetics.