与骨科损伤相比,小儿创伤性脑损伤后脑源性神经营养因子基因DNA甲基化的差异

Lacey W Heinsberg, Aboli Kesbhat, Bailey Petersen, Lauren Kaseman, Zachary Stec, Nivinthiga Anton, Patrick M Kochanek, Keith Owen Yeates, Daniel E Weeks, Yvette P Conley, Amery Treble-Barna
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引用次数: 0

摘要

重要性:儿童创伤性脑损伤(TBI)引发的生物学变化可能不同于非脑损伤。BDNF DNA甲基化(DNAm)可能作为大脑反应的一种新的、动态的生物标志物,并有助于识别与创伤性脑损伤后期恢复相关的特异性表观遗传模式。目的:确定脑外伤儿童与骨科损伤儿童(OI,对照组)的BDNF DNAm是否存在急性和长期差异。设计:表观遗传对TBI恢复的影响(EETR)研究是一项前瞻性、纵向、队列研究,在损伤后约24小时、6个月和12个月收集表型数据和外周血。背景:在匹兹堡UPMC儿童医院进行的单点研究。参与者:连续抽样3-18岁的儿童,因复杂的轻至重度非穿透性TBI (n=189)或无头部创伤证据的成骨不全(n=105)住院至少过夜。受试者因先前存在的神经或精神疾病、妨碍研究参与的感觉或运动障碍以及先前因TBI住院而被排除在外。暴露:主要暴露为损伤类型(TBI vs. OI),在TBI组中,严重程度作为次要暴露进行检查。主要结果和测量方法:主要结果是通过焦磷酸测序在7个部位(其中5个留作分析)急性(损伤后平均31.6小时)、6个(平均216.9天)和12个月(损伤后平均405.9天)测量BDNF DNAm。主要协变量包括年龄、性别和种族;次要协变量包括年龄校正体重指数、非头部损伤严重程度评分、青春期状态、社会经济地位和社会心理逆境。结果、协变量和假设是预先指定的。结果:参与者66.3%为男性,82.3%为白人,平均年龄11.7(±4.2)岁。急性期,TBI患儿在5个部位中的3个部位的DNAm显著降低(降低1.8%-8.7%;p=0.0042 ~ 5.76E-06)。1个部位在12个月时仍显著降低(p=0.0038);6个月时无明显差异。TBI严重程度(通过格拉斯哥昏迷量表测量)在任何时间点都与DNAm无关。结论和相关性:脑外伤与成骨不全儿童的BDNF DNAm似乎有所不同,特别是在急性期。BDNF - DNAm的差异可能反映了TBI特异性的早期生物学反应。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Differential DNA Methylation of the Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor Gene is Observed after Pediatric Traumatic Brain Injury Compared to Orthopedic Injury.

Pediatric traumatic brain injury (TBI) triggers biological changes that may differ from those observed in non-brain injuries. BDNF DNA methylation (DNAm) may serve as a novel, dynamic biomarker of the brain's response and help identify TBI-specific epigenetic patterns relevant to later recovery. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to examine whether BDNF DNAm differed between children with TBI and those with orthopedic injury (OI, comparison group) acutely and over time. Data were derived from the Epigenetic Effects on TBI Recovery (EETR) study, a prospective, longitudinal cohort study conducted at UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh. Children aged 3 to 18 years hospitalized at a minimum of overnight for complicated mild to severe TBI or OI without head trauma were enrolled. Exclusion criteria included prior hospitalization for TBI, pre-existing neurological or psychiatric conditions, or sensory or motor impairments precluding study participation. Blood samples were collected during hospitalization (mean=31.6 hours post-injury) and at 6 (mean=216.9 days) and 12 months (mean=405.9 days) post-injury. The primary outcome variable was DNAm assessed via pyrosequencing at five quality-controlled CpG sites in the BDNF gene (chromosome 11, hg38 positions 27722033, 27722036, 27722047, 27701612, and 27701614). The primary exposure was injury type (TBI vs. OI), with severity (measured via Glasgow Coma Scale [GCS]) examined as a secondary exposure within the TBI group. Primary covariates included age, sex, and race; secondary covariates included pubertal status, age-adjusted BMI, non-head injury severity, socioeconomic status, and psychosocial adversity. The final analysis sample included n=189 participants with TBI and n=105 participants with OI. Participants were 66.3% male, 83.2% White, and had a mean age of 10.6 (±4.4) years at the time of enrollment. Acutely, children with TBI showed significantly lower DNAm at three of five sites (3.17%- 5.83% lower; p=0.0044 to 6.48E-06) while controlling for age, sex, and race. One site remained significantly lower at 12 months (8.56% lower; p=0.0045); no significant differences were observed at 6 months. Observed differences remained robust across sensitivity models adjusting for secondary covariates. GCS-measured TBI severity was not associated with DNAm at any time point. These findings suggest that BDNF DNAm differs between children with TBI and those with OI, particularly in the acute period. BDNF DNAm differences may reflect early biological responses that are specific to TBI.

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