Acceleration of the DNA methylation clock among lynch syndrome‑associated mutation carriers
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Cuadros Celorrio, Marta Eugenia; Cano Gutiérrez, Carlos; García Rodríguez, Sonia; Martín Rodríguez, José Luis; Poyatos Andújar, Antonio; Ruiz-Cabello Osuna, Francisco; Pedrinaci, Susana; Benítez Cantos, María Soledad; Medina Vico, Pedro Pablo; Blanco Morón, Armando; González Aguilar, Antonio; Lizardi, PaulEditorial
BMC
Materia
DNA methylation Lynch syndrome Epigenetic clock
Date
2022-03-04Referencia bibliográfica
Cuadros, M... [et al.]. Acceleration of the DNA methylation clock among lynch syndrome-associated mutation carriers. BMC Med Genomics 15, 45 (2022). [https://doi.org/10.1186/s12920-022-01183-2]
Patrocinador
La Caixa Foundation CAIXA2017/1; Junta de Andalucia; Spanish Government DPI2017-84439-R; European Commission; University of Granada A-BIO-470-UGR20Résumé
Background: DNA methylation (DNAm) age metrics have been widely accepted as an epigenetic biomarker for biological
aging and disease. The purpose of this study is to assess whether or not individuals carrying Lynch Syndromeassociated
mutations are affected in their rate of biological aging, as measured by the epigenetic clock.
Methods: Genome-wide bisulfite DNA sequencing data were generated using DNA from CD4 + T-cells obtained
from peripheral blood using 27 patient samples from Lynch syndrome families. Horvath’s DNAm age model based on
penalized linear regression was applied to estimate DNAm age from patient samples with distinct clinical and genetic
characteristics to investigate cancer mutation-related aging effects.
Results: Both Lynch mutation carriers and controls exhibited high variability in their estimated DNAm age, but
regression analysis showed steeper slope for the Lynch mutation carriers. Remarkably, six Lynch Syndrome-associated
mutation carriers showed a strong correlation to the control group, and two sisters carrying Lynch Syndrome-associated
mutations, with no significant difference in lifestyle and similar chronological age, were assigned very different
DNAm age.
Conclusions: Future studies will be required to explore, in larger patient populations, whether specific epigenetic
age acceleration is predictive of time-to-cancer development, treatment response, and survival. Epigenetic clock
DNAm metrics may be affected by the presence of cancer mutations in the germline, and thus show promise of
potential clinical utility for stratified surveillance strategies based on the relative risk for imminent emergence of
tumor lesions in otherwise healthy Lynch Syndrome-associated mutation carriers.