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Epigenome‐wide DNA methylation changes with development of arsenic‐induced skin lesions in Bangladesh: A case–control follow‐up study
Authors:Wei Jie Seow  Molly L Kile  Andrea A Baccarelli  Wen‐Chi Pan  Hyang‐Min Byun  Golam Mostofa  Quazi Quamruzzaman  Mahmuder Rahman  Xihong Lin  David C Christiani
Institution:1. Department of Environmental Health, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts;2. Department of Public Health, College of Public Health and Human Sciences, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon;3. Department of Environmental Research, Dhaka Community Hospital, Dhaka, Bangladesh;4. Department of Biostatistics, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts
Abstract:Studies have found an association between aberrant DNA methylation and arsenic‐induced skin lesions. However, little is known about DNA methylation changes over time in people who develop arsenic‐induced skin lesions. We sought to investigate epigenome‐wide changes of DNA methylation in people who developed arsenic‐induced skin lesions in a 10‐year period. In 2009–2011, we conducted a follow‐up study of 900 skin lesion cases and 900 controls and identified 10 people who developed skin lesions since a baseline survey in 2001–2003. The 10 cases (“New Cases”) were matched with 10 controls who did not have skin lesions at baseline or follow‐up (“Persistent Controls”). Drinking water and blood samples were collected, and skin lesion was diagnosed by the same physician at both time points. We measured DNA methylation in blood using Infinium HumanMethylation450K BeadChip, followed by quantitative validation using pyrosequencing. Two‐sample t‐tests were used to compare changes in percent methylation between New Cases and Persistent Controls. Six CpG (cytosine‐phosphate‐guanine) sites with greatest changes of DNA methylation over time among New Cases were further validated with a correlation of 93% using pyrosequencing. One of the validated CpG site (cg03333116; change of %methylation was 13.2 in New Cases versus ?0.09 in Persistent Controls; P < 0.001) belonged to the RHBDF1 gene, which was previously reported to be hypermethylated in arsenic‐exposed cases. We examined DNA methylation changes with the development of arsenic‐induced skin lesions over time but nothing was statistically significant given the small sample size of this exploratory study and the high dimensionality of data. Environ. Mol. Mutagen. 55:449–456, 2014. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Keywords:arsenic  DNA methylation  illumina 450K  longitudinal  skin lesion
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