Abstract

Vitamin D and folate are highly UV sensitive, and critical for maintaining health throughout the lifecycle. This study examines whether solar irradiance during the first trimester of pregnancy influences vitamin D receptor (VDR) and nuclear folate gene variant occurrence, and whether affected genes influence late-life biochemical/clinical phenotypes. 228 subjects were examined for periconceptional exposure to solar irradiance, variation in vitamin D/folate genes (polymerase chain reaction (PCR)), dietary intake (food frequency questionnaire (FFQ)) and important adult biochemical/clinical phenotypes. Periconceptional solar irradiance was associated with VDR-BsmI (P = 0.0008(wk7)), TaqI (P = 0.0014(wk7)) and EcoRV (P = 0.0030(wk6)) variant occurrence between post-conceptional weeks 6-8, a period when ossification begins. Similar effects were detected for other VDR gene polymorphisms. Periconceptional solar irradiance was also associated with 19 bp del-DHFR (P = 0.0025(wk6)), and to a lesser extent C1420T-SHMT (P = 0.0249(wk6)), a folate-critical time during embryogenesis. These same genes were associated with several late-life phenotypes: VDR-BsmI, TaqI and ApaI determined the relationship between dietary vitamin D and both insulin (P < 0.0001/BB, 0.0007/tt and 0.0173/AA, respectively) and systolic blood pressure (P = 0.0290/Bb, 0.0299/Tt and 0.0412/AA, respectively), making them important early and late in the lifecycle. While these and other phenotype associations were found for the VDR variants, folate polymorphism associations in later-life were limited to C1420T-SHMT (P = 0.0037 and 0.0297 for fasting blood glucose and HbA1c levels, respectively). We additionally report nutrient-gene relationships with body mass index, thiol/folate metabolome, cognition, depression and hypertension. Furthermore, photoperiod at conception influenced occurrence of VDR-Tru9I and 2R3R-TS genotypes (P = 0.0120 and 0.0360, respectively). Findings identify environmental and nutritional agents that may interact to modify gene-phenotype relationships across the lifecycle, offering new insight into human ecology. This includes factors related to both disease aetiology and the evolution of skin pigmentation.

Highlights

  • Vitamin D and folate are highly UV sensitive, and critical for maintaining health throughout the lifecycle

  • We have examined a key environmental influence on vitamin D and folate to see if early lifecycle events can leave a signature on later life adulthood disease, a process that might be modulated by vitamin D receptor (VDR) gene variants and three folate genes which are critical to the elaboration of DNA

  • Total solar irradiance (TSI) was significantly associated with occurrence of VDR-TaqI, BsmI and EcoRV between post-conceptional weeks 6 and 8, a period when skeletal ossification begins, a physiologic process closely linked to UV-R-derived vitamin D synthesis and dietary intake

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Summary

Introduction

Vitamin D and folate are highly UV sensitive, and critical for maintaining health throughout the lifecycle. This study examines whether solar irradiance during the first trimester of pregnancy influences vitamin D receptor (VDR) and nuclear folate gene variant occurrence, and whether affected genes influence late-life biochemical/clinical phenotypes. Periconceptional solar irradiance was associated with 19 bp del-DHFR (P 1⁄4 0.0025wk6), and to a lesser extent C1420T-SHMT (P 1⁄4 0.0249wk6), a folate-critical time during embryogenesis These same genes were associated with several late-life phenotypes: VDR-BsmI, TaqI and ApaI determined the relationship between dietary vitamin D and both insulin (P < 0.0001/BB, 0.0007/tt and 0.0173/AA, respectively) and systolic blood pressure (P 1⁄4 0.0290/Bb, 0.0299/Tt and 0.0412/AA, respectively), making them important early and late in the lifecycle.

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