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  4. DNA methylation sites in early adulthood characterised by pubertal timing and development: a twin study
 
research article

DNA methylation sites in early adulthood characterised by pubertal timing and development: a twin study

Sehovic, Emir
•
Zellers, Stephanie M.
•
Youssef, Markus Kirolos  
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November 10, 2023
Clinical Epigenetics

Background Puberty is a highly heritable and variable trait, with environmental factors having a role in its eventual timing and development. Early and late pubertal onset are both associated with various diseases developing later in life, and epigenetic characterisation of pubertal timing and development could lead to important insights. Blood DNA methylation, reacting to both genotype and environment, has been associated with puberty; however, such studies are relatively scarce. We investigated peripheral blood DNA methylation profiles (using Illumina 450 K and EPIC platforms) of 1539 young adult Finnish twins associated with pubertal development scale (PDS) at ages 12 and 14 as well as pubertal age (PA).Results Fixed effect meta-analysis of the two platforms on 347,521 CpGs in common identified 58 CpG sites associated (p < 1 x 10(-5)) with either PDS or PA. All four CpGs associated with PA and 45 CpGs associated with PDS were sex-specific. Thirteen CpGs had a high heritability (h2: 0.51-0.98), while one CpG site (mapped to GET4) had a high shared environmental component accounting for 68% of the overall variance in methylation at the site. Utilising twin discordance analysis, we found 6 CpG sites (5 associated with PDS and 1 with PA) that had an environmentally driven association with puberty. Furthermore, genes with PDS- or PA-associated CpGs were consistently linked to various developmental processes and diseases such as breast, prostate and ovarian cancer, while methylation quantitative trait loci of associated CpG sites were enriched in immune pathways developing during puberty.Conclusions By identifying puberty-associated DNA methylation sites and examining the effects of sex, environment and genetics, we shed light on the intricate interplay between environment and genetics in the context of puberty. Through our comprehensive analysis, we not only deepen the understanding of the significance of both genetic and environmental factors in the complex processes of puberty and its timing, but also gain insights into potential links with disease risks.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1186/s13148-023-01594-7
Web of Science ID

WOS:001103423900001

Author(s)
Sehovic, Emir
Zellers, Stephanie M.
Youssef, Markus Kirolos  
Heikkinen, Aino
Kaprio, Jaakko
Ollikainen, Miina
Date Issued

2023-11-10

Publisher

BMC

Published in
Clinical Epigenetics
Volume

15

Issue

1

Start page

181

Subjects

Life Sciences & Biomedicine

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Puberty

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Twins

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Dna Methylation

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Meqtl

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Heritability

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Young Adults

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
UPHESS  
FunderGrant Number

We express our gratitude to Teemu Palviainen for his assistance with data management and curation and to Mikaela Hukkanen for her advice and discussions on IPA. We also thank Dr. Giovanna Chiorino for her invaluable advice and insightful discussions. Final

FIMM Technology Centre

Biocenter Finland

Available on Infoscience
February 20, 2024
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/204389
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