Abstract
BackgroundStudies have shown that the effects of maternal nutrition exposure during gestation influence metabolic risk in early life through an epigenetic mechanism. Low glycaemic index (GI) diets benefit both maternal and neonatal gestational outcomes. We hypothesize that maternal dietary GI or glycaemic load (GL) changes during pregnancy impact placental DNA methylation, especially in insulin resistance-related genes.MethodsFrom a clinical trial of overweight pregnant women, 12 subjects who successfully reduced their GI and another 12 whose GI increased despite the intervention were selected. A genome-wide differential methylation analysis of placental tissue DNA was conducted, followed by bioinformatic annotation and validation analysis. The distribution of genome-wide differentially methylated regions (DMRs) and CpG sites was described. Six CpG sites in regulatory regions of four insulin-related genes (PLIN1, CPT1B, SSTR4, and CIDEA) were selectively validated by pyrosequencing. Pairwise Spearman correlation analysis was performed to test methylation–phenotype association in an additional 153 subjects from the same trial. Correlation between methylation of significant sites and placental mRNA expression of SSTR4 was also analysed.ResultsDietary GI decreased by 24.3 (26.2–20.1) in the group who responded appropriately to the intervention and increased by 19.6 (15.2–29.1) in the comparison group. Epigenome-wide analysis identified 108 DMRs and 365 CpG sites with P < 0.05 adjusted by false discovery rate, distributed over all chromosomes. The methylation level of cg05009389 in the 3′ UTR of PLIN1 was negatively correlated with maternal weight gain (ρ = − 0.21, P = 0.027) and increase in insulin levels (ρ = − 0.24, P = 0.015) during gestation. Methylation levels of cg17586860 and cg18197392 in the 5′ UTR region of SSTR4 were negatively correlated with changes in dietary carbohydrate intake (ρ = − 0.24, Ps ≤ 0.006) and GL across gestation (ρ = − 0.23, Ps ≤ .008). This correlation survived the adjustment for maternal factors such as dietary GI, body mass index, and gestational diabetes. Up to 89% of cg18197392 methylation was explained by GL change. Cg14631053 methylation correlated positively with mRNA expression of SSTR4 in the placenta (ρ = 0.20, P = 0.037).ConclusionsWe provide the first evidence that maternal dietary GI changes during gestation may impact placental DNA methylation of insulin regulation genes. This supports the hypothesis that placental methylation may be the epigenetic mechanism through which maternal diet influences the metabolic health of offspring.
Highlights
Studies have shown that the effects of maternal nutrition exposure during gestation influence metabolic risk in early life through an epigenetic mechanism
By using genome-wide DNA differential methylation analyses followed by validation analyses, we provide evidence suggesting that maternal dietary glycaemic changes during gestation are associated with placental
The correlation we find that the reduced methylation of cg17586860 in this island in relation to greater dietary glycaemic load (GL) decrease may support the hypothesis that maternal dietary glycaemic change may have a favourable impact on SSTR4 mRNA expression through the alteration of methylation status of promoter region and possible further effects on foetal development
Summary
Studies have shown that the effects of maternal nutrition exposure during gestation influence metabolic risk in early life through an epigenetic mechanism. Excessive weight gain during pregnancy is associated with multiple maternal and neonatal complications and may have long-term unfavourable effects on the long-term risk of developing metabolic disorders in offspring [3]. A low glycaemic index (GI) diet, as a dietary intervention for pregnant women with high metabolic risk, has been successfully shown to improve maternal gestational outcomes [4, 5], reduce the need for insulin among women with gestational diabetes [6], and reduce neonatal birth weight [7] and incidence of births that are clinically considered “large for gestational age” [4]. Evidence is lacking as to whether maternal GI diet changes during gestation are associated with offspring gene methylation changes
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