Epigenetic predictors of lifestyle traits applied to the blood and brain

Author:

Gadd Danni A1ORCID,Stevenson Anna J1ORCID,Hillary Robert F1,McCartney Daniel L1,Wrobel Nicola2,McCafferty Sarah2ORCID,Murphy Lee2,Russ Tom C34,Harris Sarah E4,Redmond Paul4,Taylor Adele M4,Smith Colin5,Rose Jamie6,Millar Tracey5,Spires-Jones Tara L6ORCID,Cox Simon R4,Marioni Riccardo E1

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Genomic and Experimental Medicine, Institute of Genetics and Cancer, University of Edinburgh 2XU, UK

2. Edinburgh Clinical Research Facility, Western General Hospital, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH4 2XU, UK

3. Alzheimer Scotland Dementia Research Centre, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH8 9JZ, UK

4. Lothian Birth Cohorts group, Department of Psychology, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH8 9JZ, UK

5. Centre for Clinical Brain Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH8 9JZ, UK

6. Centre for Discovery Brain Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH8 9JZ, UK

Abstract

Abstract Modifiable lifestyle factors influence the risk of developing many neurological diseases. These factors have been extensively linked with blood-based genome-wide DNA methylation, but it is unclear if the signatures from blood translate to the target tissue of interest—the brain. To investigate this, we apply blood-derived epigenetic predictors of four lifestyle traits to genome-wide DNA methylation from five post-mortem brain regions and the last blood sample prior to death in 14 individuals in the Lothian Birth Cohort 1936. Using these matched samples, we found that correlations between blood and brain DNA methylation scores for smoking, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, alcohol and body mass index were highly variable across brain regions. Smoking scores in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex had the strongest correlations with smoking scores in blood (r = 0.5, n = 14, P = 0.07) and smoking behaviour (r = 0.56, n = 9, P = 0.12). This was also the brain region which exhibited the largest correlations for DNA methylation at site cg05575921 – the single strongest correlate of smoking in blood—in relation to blood (r = 0.61, n = 14, P = 0.02) and smoking behaviour (r = −0.65, n = 9, P = 0.06). This suggested a particular vulnerability to smoking-related differential methylation in this region. Our work contributes to understanding how lifestyle factors affect the brain and suggest that lifestyle-related DNA methylation is likely to be both brain region dependent and in many cases poorly proxied for by blood. Though these pilot data provide a rarely-available opportunity for the comparison of methylation patterns across multiple brain regions and the blood, due to the limited sample size available our results must be considered as preliminary and should therefore be used as a basis for further investigation.

Funder

Age UK (Disconnected Mind project) and by the UK Medical Research Council

Centre for Cognitive Ageing and Cognitive Epidemiology

Age UK, The Wellcome Trust Institutional Strategic

The University of Edinburgh, and The University of Queensland

National Institutes of Health (NIH) research

Medical Research Council

Alzheimer Scotland

NHS Lothian and The Scottish Government

Wellcome Trust

Alzheimer’s Research UK major project

A.J.S.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science

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4. Epigenome-wide association study of body mass index, and the adverse outcomes of adiposity;Wahl;Nature,2017

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