학술논문

DNA methylation in peripheral blood leukocytes for the association with glucose metabolism and invasive breast cancer
Document Type
article
Source
Clinical Epigenetics. 15(1)
Subject
Biological Sciences
Genetics
Human Genome
Breast Cancer
Prevention
Cancer
Nutrition
Diabetes
Aging
Aetiology
4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies
Detection
screening and diagnosis
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Good Health and Well Being
Female
Humans
DNA Methylation
Glucose
Insulin
Insulin Resistance
Leukocytes
Risk Factors
Breast Neoplasms
Epigenetic signatures
DNA methylation
Glucose homeostasis
Obesity
Invasive breast cancer
Postmenopausal women
Clinical Sciences
Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine
Language
Abstract
BackgroundInsulin resistance (IR) is a well-established factor for breast cancer (BC) risk in postmenopausal women, but the interrelated molecular pathways on the methylome are not explicitly described. We conducted a population-level epigenome-wide association (EWA) study for DNA methylation (DNAm) probes that are associated with IR and prospectively correlated with BC development, both overall and in BC subtypes among postmenopausal women.MethodsWe used data from Women's Health Initiative (WHI) ancillary studies for our EWA analyses and evaluated the associations of site-specific DNAm across the genome with IR phenotypes by multiple regressions adjusting for age and leukocyte heterogeneities. For our analysis of the top 20 IR-CpGs with BC risk, we used the WHI and the Cancer Genomic Atlas (TCGA), using multiple Cox proportional hazards and logit regressions, respectively, accounting for age, diabetes, obesity, leukocyte heterogeneities, and tumor purity (for TCGA). We further conducted a Gene Set Enrichment Analysis.ResultsWe detected several EWA-CpGs in TXNIP, CPT1A, PHGDH, and ABCG1. In particular, cg19693031 in TXNIP was replicated in all IR phenotypes, measured by fasting levels of glucose, insulin, and homeostatic model assessment-IR. Of those replicated IR-genes, 3 genes (CPT1A, PHGDH, and ABCG1) were further correlated with BC risk; and 1 individual CpG (cg01676795 in POR) was commonly detected across the 2 cohorts.ConclusionsOur study contributes to better understanding of the interconnected molecular pathways on the methylome between IR and BC carcinogenesis and suggests potential use of DNAm markers in the peripheral blood cells as preventive targets to detect an at-risk group for IR and BC in postmenopausal women.