Abstract

BackgroundChronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is the third-leading cause of death worldwide. Identifying COPD-associated DNA methylation marks in African-Americans may contribute to our understanding of racial disparities in COPD susceptibility. We determined differentially methylated genes and co-methylation network modules associated with COPD in African-Americans recruited during exacerbations of COPD and smoking controls from the Pennsylvania Study of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Exacerbations (PA-SCOPE) cohort.MethodsWe assessed DNA methylation from whole blood samples in 362 African-American smokers in the PA-SCOPE cohort using the Illumina Infinium HumanMethylation27 BeadChip Array. Final analysis included 19302 CpG probes annotated to the nearest gene transcript after quality control. We tested methylation associations with COPD case-control status using mixed linear models. Weighted gene comethylation networks were constructed using weighted gene coexpression network analysis (WGCNA) and network modules were analyzed for association with COPD.ResultsThere were five differentially methylated CpG probes significantly associated with COPD among African-Americans at an FDR less than 5 %, and seven additional probes that approached significance at an FDR less than 10 %. The top ranked gene association was MAML1, which has been shown to affect NOTCH-dependent angiogenesis in murine lung. Network modeling yielded the “yellow” and “blue” comethylation modules which were significantly associated with COPD (p-value 4 × 10-10 and 4 × 10-9, respectively). The yellow module was enriched for gene sets related to inflammatory pathways known to be relevant to COPD. The blue module contained the top ranked genes in the concurrent differential methylation analysis (FXYD1/LGI4, gene significance p-value 1.2 × 10-26; MAML1, p-value 2.0 × 10-26; CD72, p-value 2.1 × 10-25; and LPO, p-value 7.2 × 10-25), and was significantly associated with lung development processes in Gene Ontology gene-set enrichment analysis.ConclusionWe identified 12 differentially methylated CpG sites associated with COPD that mapped to biologically plausible genes. Network module comethylation patterns have identified candidate genes that may be contributing to racial differences in COPD susceptibility and severity. COPD-associated comethylation modules contained genes previously associated with lung disease and inflammation and recapitulated known COPD-associated genes. The genes implicated by differential methylation and WGCNA analysis may provide mechanistic targets contributing to COPD susceptibility, exacerbations, and outcomes among African-Americans.Trial registrationTrial Registration: NCT00774176, Registry: ClinicalTrials.gov, URL: www.clinicaltrials.gov, Date of Enrollment of First Participant: June 2004, Date Registered: 04 January 2008 (retrospectively registered).Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12931-016-0459-8) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is the third-leading cause of death worldwide

  • Gene annotation for the remaining four differentially methylated Cytosine phosphate-bond guanine dinucleotide (CpG) sites associated with COPD included RNA-binding Protein Fox-1 Homolog 2 (RBFOX2), Cluster of Differentiation 72 (CD72), GRP1Associated Scaffold Protein (GRASP), and SH3 Domain and Tetratricopeptide Repeats 1 (SH3TC1)

  • In conclusion, we performed differential methylation analysis in African-American subjects and identified 12 CpG sites statistically significantly associated with COPD at an false discovery rate (FDR) less than 10 %, of which seven are not statistically significant in a WH cohort study of COPD

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Summary

Introduction

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is the third-leading cause of death worldwide. Recent data suggest that the prevalence of emphysema, chronic bronchitis, and COPD hospitalizations are increasing among African-Americans (AA), [3,4,5] and that AA may develop COPD at a younger age than those who racially self-identify as white (WH) [5]. AA individuals present with similar severity of airflow obstruction as WH, despite fewer pack-years of smoking [5]. Once they have developed COPD, AA have lower quality of life scores [7].

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