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Early-life determinants of hypoxia-inducible factor 3A gene (HIF3A) methylation: a birth cohort study

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posted on 2019-07-01, 00:00 authored by T Mansell, A L Ponsonby, V Januar, B Novakovic, Fiona Collier, D Burgner, Peter VuillerminPeter Vuillermin, J Ryan, R Saffery, Barwon Infant Study Investigator Team
© 2019 The Author(s). Background: Methylation of the hypoxia-inducible factor 3α gene (HIF3A) has been linked to pregnancy exposures, infant adiposity and later BMI. Genetic variation influences HIF3A methylation levels and may modify these relationships. However, data in very early life are limited, particularly in association with adverse pregnancy outcomes. We investigated the relationship between maternal and gestational factors, infant anthropometry, genetic variation and HIF3A DNA methylation in the Barwon Infant Study, a population-based birth cohort. Methylation of two previously studied regions of HIF3A were tested in the cord blood mononuclear cells of 938 infants. Results: No compelling evidence was found of an association between birth weight, adiposity or maternal gestational diabetes with methylation at the most widely studied HIF3A region. Male sex (- 4.3%, p < 0.001) and pre-eclampsia (- 5.4%, p = 0.02) negatively associated with methylation at a second region of HIF3A; while positive associations were identified for gestational diabetes (4.8%, p = 0.01) and gestational age (1.2% increase per week, p < 0.001). HIF3A genetic variation also associated strongly with methylation at this region (p < 0.001). Conclusions: Pre- and perinatal factors impact HIF3A methylation, including pre-eclampsia. This provides evidence that specific pregnancy complications, previously linked to adverse outcomes for both mother and child, impact the infant epigenome in a molecular pathway critical to several vascular and metabolic conditions. Further work is required to understand the mechanisms and clinical relevance, particularly the differing effects of in utero exposure to gestational diabetes or pre-eclampsia.

History

Journal

Clinical epigenetics

Volume

11

Issue

1

Article number

96

Publisher

BioMed Central

Location

London, Eng.

ISSN

1868-7075

eISSN

1868-7083

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2019, The Authors