Assisted reproductive technologies are associated with limited epigenetic variation at birth that largely resolves by adulthood

Boris Novakovic(The University of Melbourne), Sharon Lewis(The University of Melbourne), Jane Halliday(The University of Melbourne), Joanne Kennedy(Murdoch Children's Research Institute), David Burgner(Royal Children's Hospital), Anna Czajko(Murdoch Children's Research Institute), Bowon Kim(Murdoch Children's Research Institute), Alexandra Sexton‐Oates(Murdoch Children's Research Institute), Markus Juonala(University of Turku), Karin Hammarberg(Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority), David J. Amor(Royal Children's Hospital), Lex W. Doyle(Royal Women's Hospital), Sarath Ranganathan(Royal Children's Hospital), Liam Welsh(Royal Children's Hospital), Michael Cheung(Royal Children's Hospital), John McBain(Royal Women's Hospital), Robert I. McLachlan(Hudson Institute of Medical Research), Richard Saffery(The University of Melbourne)
Nature Communications
September 2, 2019
Cited by 151Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

More than 7 million individuals have been conceived by Assisted Reproductive Technologies (ART) and there is clear evidence that ART is associated with a range of adverse early life outcomes, including rare imprinting disorders. The periconception period and early embryogenesis are associated with widespread epigenetic remodeling, which can be influenced by ART, with effects on the developmental trajectory in utero, and potentially on health throughout life. Here we profile genome-wide DNA methylation in blood collected in the newborn period and in adulthood (age 22-35 years) from a unique longitudinal cohort of ART-conceived individuals, previously shown to have no differences in health outcomes in early adulthood compared with non-ART-conceived individuals. We show evidence for specific ART-associated variation in methylation around birth, most of which occurred independently of embryo culturing. Importantly, ART-associated epigenetic variation at birth largely resolves by adulthood with no direct evidence that it impacts on development and health.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis