Sex differences in DNA methylation across gestation: a large scale, cross-cohort, multi-tissue analysis

Author:

Czamara DarinaORCID,Dieckmann LindaORCID,Lahti-Pulkkinen MariusORCID,Cruceanu CristianaORCID,Henrich WolfgangORCID,Plagemann Andreas,Räikkönen KatriORCID,Braun Thorsten,Binder Elisabeth B.ORCID,Lahti JariORCID,Entringer SonjaORCID

Abstract

AbstractBiological sex is a key variable influencing many physiological systems. Disease prevalence as well as treatment success can be modified by sex. Differences emerge already early in life and include pregnancy complications and adverse birth outcomes. The placenta is a critical organ for fetal development and shows sex-based differences in the expression of hormones and cytokines. Epigenetic regulation, such as DNA methylation (DNAm), may underlie the previously reported placental sexual dimorphism. We associated placental DNAm with fetal sex in three cohorts. Individual cohort results were meta-analyzed with random-effects modelling. CpG-sites differentially methylated with sex were further investigated regarding pathway enrichment, overlap with methylation quantitative trait loci (meQTLs), and hits from phenome-wide association studies (PheWAS). We evaluated the consistency of findings across tissues (CVS, i.e. chorionic villus sampling from early placenta, and cord blood) as well as with gene expression. We identified 10,320 epigenome-wide significant sex-differentially methylated probes (DMPs) spread throughout the epigenome of the placenta at birth. Most DMPs presented with lower DNAm levels in females. DMPs mapped to genes upregulated in brain, were enriched for neurodevelopmental pathways and significantly overlapped with meQTLs and PheWAS hits. Effect sizes were moderately correlated between CVS and placenta at birth, but only weakly correlated between birth placenta and cord blood. Sex differential gene expression in birth placenta was less pronounced and implicated genetic regions only marginally overlapped with those associated with differential DNAm. Our study provides an integrative perspective on sex-differential DNAm in perinatal tissues underscoring the possible link between placenta and brain.

Funder

Academy of Finland

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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