Linking the gut microbiome to host DNA methylation by a discovery and replication epigenome-wide association study

通过一项发现和重复的全基因组表观关联研究,将肠道微生物组与宿主DNA甲基化联系起来

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Abstract

Microbiome influences multiple human systems, but its effects on gene methylation is unknown. We investigated the relations between gene methylation in blood and the abundance of common gut bacteria profiled by 16s rRNA gene sequencing in two population-based Dutch cohorts: LifeLines-Deep (LLD, n = 616, discovery) and the Netherlands Twin Register (NTR, n = 296, replication). In LLD, we also explored microbial pathways using data generated by shotgun metagenomic sequencing (n = 683). Methylation in both cohorts was profiled in blood samples using the Illumina 450K array. Discovery and replication analysis identified two independent CpGs associated with the genus Eggerthella: cg16586104 (P(meta-analysis) = 3.21 × 10(-11)) and cg12234533 (P(meta-analysis) = 4.29 × 10(-10)). We also show that microbiome can mediate the effect of environmental factors on host gene methylation. In this first association study linking epigenome to microbiome, we found and replicated the associations of two CpGs to the abundance of genus Eggerthella and identified microbiome as a mediator of the exposome. These associations are observational and suggest further investigation in larger and longitudinal set-ups.

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