Negative association between higher maternal body mass index and breastfeeding outcomes is not mediated by DNA methylation

Author:

Elliott Hannah R.ORCID,Bennett Chloe L.,Caramaschi DorettaORCID,English SineadORCID

Abstract

AbstractThe benefits of breastfeeding for the health and wellbeing of both infants and mothers are well documented, yet global breastfeeding rates are low. One factor associated with low breastfeeding is maternal body mass index (BMI), which is used as a measure of obesity. The negative relationship between maternal obesity and breastfeeding is likely caused by a variety of social, psychological, and physiological factors. Maternal obesity may also have a direct biological association with breastfeeding through changes in maternal DNA methylation. Here, we investigate this potential biological association using data from a UK-based cohort study, the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC). We find that pre-pregnancy body mass index (BMI) is associated with lower initiation to breastfeed and shorter breastfeeding duration. We conduct epigenome-wide association studies (EWAS) of maternal BMI and breastfeeding outcomes and candidate-gene analysis of methylation sites associated with BMI identified via previous meta-EWAS. We find that DNA methylation at cg11453712, annotated to PHTP1, is associated with maternal BMI. From our results, neither this association nor those at candidate-gene sites are likely to mediate the link between maternal BMI and breastfeeding.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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