학술논문
Does genetic predisposition modify the effect of lifestyle-related factors on DNA methylation?
Document Type
article
Author
Source
Epigenetics, Vol 17, Iss 12, Pp 1838-1847 (2022)
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
1559-2294
1559-2308
15592294
1559-2308
15592294
Abstract
Lifestyle-related phenotypes have been shown to be heritable and associated with DNA methylation. We aimed to investigate whether genetic predisposition to tobacco smoking, alcohol consumption, and higher body mass index (BMI) moderates the effect of these phenotypes on blood DNA methylation. We calculated polygenic scores (PGS) to quantify genetic predisposition to these phenotypes using training (N = 7,431) and validation (N = 4,307) samples. Using paired genetic-methylation data (N = 4,307), gene–environment interactions (i.e., PGS × lifestyle) were assessed using linear mixed-effects models with outcomes: 1) methylation at sites found to be strongly associated with smoking (1,061 CpGs), alcohol consumption (459 CpGs), and BMI (85 CpGs) and 2) two epigenetic ageing measures, PhenoAge and GrimAge. In the validation sample, PGS explained ~1.4% (P = 1 × 10−14), ~0.6% (P = 2 × 10−7), and ~8.7% (P = 7 × 10−87) of variance in smoking initiation, alcohol consumption, and BMI, respectively. Nominally significant interaction effects (P