Lauren Frazer, Tianjiao Chu, Patricia Shaw, Camille Boufford, Lucas Tavares Naief, Michaela Ednie, Laken Ritzert, Caitlin P Green, Misty Good, David Peters
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) is an often fatal intestinal injury that primarily affects preterm infants for which screening tools are lacking. We performed a pilot analysis of DNA methylation in peripheral blood samples from preterm infants with and without NEC to identify potential NEC biomarkers.
Methods: Peripheral blood samples were collected from infants at NEC diagnosis (n = 15) or from preterm controls (n = 13). Targeted genome-wide analysis was performed to identify DNA methylation differences between cases and controls.
Results: Broad differences between NEC cases and controls were identified in distinct genomic elements. Differences between surgical NEC cases and controls were frequently associated with inflammation. Deconvolution analysis to identify cell type-specific DNA signatures revealed increases in ileal, vascular endothelial, and cardiomyocyte cell type proportions and decreases in colonic and neuronal cell type proportions in blood from NEC cases relative to controls.
Conclusions: We identified marked differences in DNA methylation of peripheral blood samples from preterm infants with and without NEC. Increased ileal cell-specific methylation signatures in the blood of infants with NEC relative to controls, with a marked increase seen in surgical cases, provides rationale for further analysis of intestinal DNA methylation signatures as biomarkers of NEC.
期刊介绍:
Epigenomics provides the forum to address the rapidly progressing research developments in this ever-expanding field; to report on the major challenges ahead and critical advances that are propelling the science forward. The journal delivers this information in concise, at-a-glance article formats – invaluable to a time constrained community.
Substantial developments in our current knowledge and understanding of genomics and epigenetics are constantly being made, yet this field is still in its infancy. Epigenomics provides a critical overview of the latest and most significant advances as they unfold and explores their potential application in the clinical setting.