Abstract

BackgroundGenetic studies to date have not provided satisfactory evidence regarding risk polymorphisms for cardiovascular disease (CVD). Conversely, epigenetic mechanisms, including DNA methylation, seem to influence the risk of CVD and related conditions. Because postmenopausal women experience an increase in CVD, we set out to determine whether global DNA methylation was associated with cardiovascular risk in this population.MethodsIn this cross sectional study carried out in a university hospital, 90 postmenopausal women without prior CVD diagnosis (55.5 ± 4.9 years, 5.8 [3.0–10.0] years since menopause) were enrolled. DNA was extracted from peripheral leukocytes and global DNA methylation levels were obtained with an ELISA kit. Cardiovascular risk was estimated by the Framingham General Cardiovascular Risk Score (10-year risk) (FRS). Clinical and laboratory variables were assessed. Patients were stratified into two CVD risk groups: low (FRS: <10 %, n = 69) and intermediate/high risk (FRS ≥10 %, n = 21).ResultsAge, time since menopause, blood pressure, total cholesterol, and LDL-c levels were higher in FRS ≥10 % group vs. FRS <10 % group. BMI, triglycerides, HDL-c, HOMA-IR, glucose and hsC-reactive protein levels were similar in the two groups. Global DNA methylation (% 5mC) in the overall sample was 26.5 % (23.6–36.9). The FRS ≥10 % group presented lower global methylation levels compared with the FRS <10 % group: 23.9 % (20.6–29.1) vs. 28.8 % (24.3–39.6), p = 0.02. This analysis remained significant even after adjustment for time since menopause (p = 0.02).ConclusionsOur results indicate that lower global DNA methylation is associated with higher cardiovascular risk in postmenopausal women.

Highlights

  • Genetic studies to date have not provided satisfactory evidence regarding risk polymorphisms for cardiovascular disease (CVD)

  • The formula proposed by the Framingham Heart study to calculate CV risk takes into account common behavioral, biochemical, and environmental aspects that may contribute to the development of CVD [11, 12]

  • Patients with Framingham risk score (FRS) ≥10 % were older than the group with FRS

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Summary

Introduction

Genetic studies to date have not provided satisfactory evidence regarding risk polymorphisms for cardiovascular disease (CVD). Epidemiologic data show that postmenopausal women experience an increase in cardiovascular disease (CVD), which could be associated with both aging and changes in hormonal status [1, 2]. The importance of DNMTs is related to de novo DNA methyltransferases 3a/3b (DNMT3a/3b) synthesis, which will methylate unmethylated cytosines to induce differential patterns of methylation in the genome of early embryos. These patterns are subsequently copied from parental strands into daughter strands during DNA replication by maintenance DNMT1 [23]

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