Association of leukocyte DNA methylation changes with dietary folate and alcohol intake in the EPIC study
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/17035Date
2019-04-02Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Perrier, Flavie; Viallon, Vivian; Ambatipudi, Srikant; Ghantous, Akram; Cuenin, Cyrille; Hernandez-Vargas, Hector; Chajès, Véronique; Baglietto, Laura; Matejcic, Marco; Moreno-Macías, Hortensia; Kühn, Tilman; Boeing, Heiner; Karakatsani, Anna; Kotanidou, Anastasia; Trichopoulou, Antonia; Sieri, Sabina; Panico, Salvatore; Fasanelli, Francesca; Dollé, Martijn; Onland-Moret, Charlotte; Sluijs, Ivonne; Weiderpass, Elisabete; Quirós, José Ramón; Agudo, Antonio; Huerta, José María; Ardanaz, Eva; Dorronsoro, Miren; Tong, Tammy Y.N.; Tsilidis, Konstantinos K.; Riboli, Elio; Gunter, Mark J.; Herceg, Zdenko; Ferrari, Pietro; Romieu, IsabelleAbstract
Results - After correction for multiple testing, intake of dietary folate was not associated with methylation level at any DNA methylation site, while weak associations were observed between alcohol intake and methylation level at CpG sites cg03199996 and cg07382687, with qval = 0.029 and qval = 0.048, respectively. Interestingly, the DMR analysis revealed a total of 24 and 90 regions associated with dietary folate and alcohol, respectively. For alcohol intake, 6 of the 15 most significant DMRs were identified through FL.
Conclusions - Alcohol intake was associated with methylation levels at two CpG sites. Evidence from DMR and FL analyses indicated that dietary folate and alcohol intake may be associated with genomic regions with tumor suppressor activity such as the GSDMD and HOXA5 genes. These results were in line with the hypothesis that epigenetic mechanisms play a role in the association between folate and alcohol, although further studies are warranted to clarify the importance of these mechanisms in cancer. Fjern