Abstract

BackgroundDNA methylation has been shown to be associated with adiposity in adulthood. However, whether similar DNA methylation patterns are associated with childhood and adolescent body mass index (BMI) is largely unknown. More insight into this relationship at younger ages may have implications for future prevention of obesity and its related traits.MethodsWe examined whether DNA methylation in cord blood and whole blood in childhood and adolescence was associated with BMI in the age range from 2 to 18 years using both cross-sectional and longitudinal models. We performed meta-analyses of epigenome-wide association studies including up to 4133 children from 23 studies. We examined the overlap of findings reported in previous studies in children and adults with those in our analyses and calculated enrichment.ResultsDNA methylation at three CpGs (cg05937453, cg25212453, and cg10040131), each in a different age range, was associated with BMI at Bonferroni significance, P < 1.06 × 10−7, with a 0.96 standard deviation score (SDS) (standard error (SE) 0.17), 0.32 SDS (SE 0.06), and 0.32 BMI SDS (SE 0.06) higher BMI per 10% increase in methylation, respectively. DNA methylation at nine additional CpGs in the cross-sectional childhood model was associated with BMI at false discovery rate significance. The strength of the associations of DNA methylation at the 187 CpGs previously identified to be associated with adult BMI, increased with advancing age across childhood and adolescence in our analyses. In addition, correlation coefficients between effect estimates for those CpGs in adults and in children and adolescents also increased. Among the top findings for each age range, we observed increasing enrichment for the CpGs that were previously identified in adults (birth Penrichment = 1; childhood Penrichment = 2.00 × 10−4; adolescence Penrichment = 2.10 × 10−7).ConclusionsThere were only minimal associations of DNA methylation with childhood and adolescent BMI. With the advancing age of the participants across childhood and adolescence, we observed increasing overlap with altered DNA methylation loci reported in association with adult BMI. These findings may be compatible with the hypothesis that DNA methylation differences are mostly a consequence rather than a cause of obesity.

Highlights

  • IntroductionWhether similar Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) methylation patterns are associated with childhood and adolescent body mass index (BMI) is largely unknown

  • Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) methylation has been shown to be associated with adiposity in adulthood

  • DNA methylation at nine additional cytosine-phosphate-guanine sites (CpGs) in the cross-sectional childhood model was associated with body mass index (BMI) at false discovery rate significance

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Summary

Introduction

Whether similar DNA methylation patterns are associated with childhood and adolescent body mass index (BMI) is largely unknown. More insight into this relationship at younger ages may have implications for future prevention of obesity and its related traits. The largest epigenome-wide association study (EWAS) in adults identified cross-sectional associations between DNA methylation at 187 loci and BMI in over 10, 000 participants [5]. Previous studies of the associations between epigenome-wide DNA methylation and childhood and adolescent adiposity were small and inconclusive [10,11,12,13,14,15,16]. Obtaining more knowledge on the association between DNA methylation and adiposity already in childhood may have implications for future prevention of obesity and its related traits

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