捕获辅助生殖技术对脐带血DNA甲基化的性别特异性和低生育能力相关影响。

IF 5.7 2区 医学 Q1 Medicine
Sophia Rahimi, Xiaojian Shao, Donovan Chan, Josée Martel, Anick Bérard, William D Fraser, Marie-Michelle Simon, Tony Kwan, Guillaume Bourque, Jacquetta Trasler
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引用次数: 1

摘要

背景:通过辅助生殖受孕的儿童生长和基因组印记障碍的风险增加,通常与DNA甲基化缺陷有关。已有研究表明,辅助生殖技术(ART)和潜在的亲代不育可诱导表观遗传不稳定,特别是干扰生殖细胞和着床前发育过程中的DNA甲基化重编程事件。迄今为止,探索ART与DNA甲基化缺陷之间关系的人类研究报告了不一致或不确定的结果,可能是由于群体异质性和使用的技术对表观基因组的覆盖范围有限。在我们的研究中,我们通过全面分析来自人类前瞻性纵向出生队列3D(设计、开发、发现)研究的73例单胎妊娠人类脐带血样本(n = 36对照组,n = 37 ART/低生育能力组)的DNA甲基化组,探索了ART的表观遗传风险,使用基于高分辨率测序的自定义捕获面板,检查了基因组中超过240万个常染色体CpGs。结果:我们发现了ART/低生育能力对脐带血DNA甲基化模式的性别特异性影响的证据。我们的全基因组分析发现,受抗逆转录病毒治疗/生育能力低下影响的CpGs在女性中比在男性婴儿脐带血中多46%。我们对三个与ART后DNA甲基化改变相关的印迹基因(kcnq10t1、H19/IGF2和GNAS)进行了详细分析,发现女婴脐带血与DNA低甲基化有关。与侵入性较低的程序(如宫内人工授精)相比,侵入性较强的人工授精(体外受精、胞浆内精子注射、胚胎培养)对脐带血DNA甲基化组的影响更为显著和明显。在体外组中,我们发现与发育相关的显著富集的基因本体术语的比例比体内组高出近四倍。结论:我们的研究强调了一种敏感的、有针对性的、基于测序的方法的能力,该方法可以揭示与生育能力低下和抗逆转录病毒治疗相关的脐带血DNA甲基化扰动,并受后代性别和抗逆转录病毒治疗技术侵入性的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Capturing sex-specific and hypofertility-linked effects of assisted reproductive technologies on the cord blood DNA methylome.

Capturing sex-specific and hypofertility-linked effects of assisted reproductive technologies on the cord blood DNA methylome.

Capturing sex-specific and hypofertility-linked effects of assisted reproductive technologies on the cord blood DNA methylome.

Capturing sex-specific and hypofertility-linked effects of assisted reproductive technologies on the cord blood DNA methylome.

Background: Children conceived through assisted reproduction are at an increased risk for growth and genomic imprinting disorders, often linked to DNA methylation defects. It has been suggested that assisted reproductive technology (ART) and underlying parental infertility can induce epigenetic instability, specifically interfering with DNA methylation reprogramming events during germ cell and preimplantation development. To date, human studies exploring the association between ART and DNA methylation defects have reported inconsistent or inconclusive results, likely due to population heterogeneity and the use of technologies with limited coverage of the epigenome. In our study, we explored the epigenetic risk of ART by comprehensively profiling the DNA methylome of 73 human cord blood samples of singleton pregnancies (n = 36 control group, n = 37 ART/hypofertile group) from a human prospective longitudinal birth cohort, the 3D (Design, Develop, Discover) Study, using a high-resolution sequencing-based custom capture panel that examines over 2.4 million autosomal CpGs in the genome.

Results: We identified evidence of sex-specific effects of ART/hypofertility on cord blood DNA methylation patterns. Our genome-wide analyses identified ~ 46% more CpGs affected by ART/hypofertility in female than in male infant cord blood. We performed a detailed analysis of three imprinted genes which have been associated with altered DNA methylation following ART (KCNQ1OT1, H19/IGF2 and GNAS) and found that female infant cord blood was associated with DNA hypomethylation. When compared to less invasive procedures such as intrauterine insemination, more invasive ARTs (in vitro fertilization, intracytoplasmic sperm injection, embryo culture) resulted in more marked and distinct effects on the cord blood DNA methylome. In the in vitro group, we found a close to fourfold higher proportion of significantly enriched Gene Ontology terms involved in development than in the in vivo group.

Conclusions: Our study highlights the ability of a sensitive, targeted, sequencing-based approach to uncover DNA methylation perturbations in cord blood associated with hypofertility and ART and influenced by offspring sex and ART technique invasiveness.

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来源期刊
Clinical Epigenetics
Clinical Epigenetics Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology-Developmental Biology
CiteScore
8.90
自引率
5.30%
发文量
150
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: Clinical Epigenetics, the official journal of the Clinical Epigenetics Society, is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that encompasses all aspects of epigenetic principles and mechanisms in relation to human disease, diagnosis and therapy. Clinical trials and research in disease model organisms are particularly welcome.
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