Epigenome-wide DNA Methylation Association Analysis Identified Novel Loci in Peripheral Cells for Alcohol Consumption among European American Male Veterans.
Ke Xu, J. Montalvo-Ortiz, Xinyu Zhang, S. Southwick, J. Krystal, R. Pietrzak, J. Gelernter
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引用次数: 25
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Hazardous alcohol consumption has significant adverse medical consequences. These effects may be mediated, in part, by alterations in DNA methylation. Thus, DNA methylation signatures in peripheral cells may provide biomarkers of the medical impact of alcohol use and the risk for future alcohol consumption.
METHOD
Using a high density methylation array, we characterized epigenome-wide DNA methylation in saliva cells with respect to alcohol consumption in a large cohort of male European American veterans. In this study, DNA methylation of over 870,000 CpG DNA sites was profiled in 1,135 European American men. Alcohol consumption was assessed using the Alcohol Use Disorder Identification Test-Consumption (AUDIT-C). Linear regression was applied in an epigenome-wide association study (EWAS), adjusted for confounders. Gene set enrichment analysis was performed in the KEGG database with a correction for gene length.
RESULTS
We found that a total of 70 CpG sites reached EWAS-corrected significance (p<6E-08) with small effects on alcohol consumption for individual CpG sites, including 64 new CpG sites and six CpG sites that were previously reported as associated with alcohol use disorder, liver function, body mass index, and lipid metabolism. The most significant CpG site was located in SLC7A11(t=-11.34, p=2.66E-28), a gene involved specifically in cysteine and glutamate transportation. The 70 significant CpG sites were located on 44 genes, including genes involved in amino acid transport and metabolism systems. We identified 68 pathways with a false discovery rate <0.05.
CONCLUSION
We identified novel DNA methylation sites associated with alcohol consumption. Results may shed light on peripheral mechanisms of alcohol consumption on adverse health outcomes among heavy drinkers. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
期刊介绍:
Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research''s scope spans animal and human clinical research, epidemiological, experimental, policy, and historical research relating to any aspect of alcohol abuse, dependence, or alcoholism. This journal uses a multi-disciplinary approach in its scope of alcoholism, its causes, clinical and animal effect, consequences, patterns, treatments and recovery, predictors and prevention.