An epigenome-wide association study of sex-specific chronological ageing

Daniel L. McCartney(Edinburgh Cancer Research), Futao Zhang(The University of Queensland), Robert F. Hillary(Edinburgh Cancer Research), Qian Zhang(The University of Queensland), Anna J. Stevenson(Edinburgh Cancer Research), Rosie M. Walker(Edinburgh Cancer Research), Mairead L. Bermingham(Edinburgh Cancer Research), Thibaud Boutin(Institute of Genetics and Cancer), Stewart W. Morris(Edinburgh Cancer Research), Archie Campbell(Edinburgh Cancer Research), Alison D. Murray(University of Aberdeen), Heather C. Whalley(Royal Edinburgh Hospital), David J. Porteous(Edinburgh Cancer Research), Caroline Hayward(Institute of Genetics and Cancer), Kathryn L. Evans(Edinburgh Cancer Research), Tamir Chandra(Institute of Genetics and Cancer), Ian J. Deary(University of Edinburgh), Andrew M. McIntosh(Royal Edinburgh Hospital), Jian Yang(The University of Queensland), Peter M. Visscher(The University of Queensland), Allan F. McRae(The University of Queensland), Riccardo E. Marioni(Edinburgh Cancer Research)
Genome Medicine
December 31, 2019
Cited by 170Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Advanced age is associated with cognitive and physical decline and is a major risk factor for a multitude of disorders. There is also a gap in life expectancy between males and females. DNA methylation differences have been shown to be associated with both age and sex. Here, we investigate age-by-sex differences in blood-based DNA methylation in an unrelated cohort of 2586 individuals between the ages of 18 and 87 years, with replication in a further 4450 individuals between the ages of 18 and 93 years. METHODS: ) used in both the discovery and replication data. A second, highly conservative mixed linear model method that better controls the false-positive rate was also applied, using the same genome-wide significance thresholds. RESULTS: Using the linear regression method, 52 autosomal and 597 X-linked CpG sites, mapping to 251 unique genes, replicated with concordant effect size directions in the age-by-sex interaction analysis. The site with the greatest difference mapped to GAGE10, an X-linked gene. Here, DNA methylation levels remained stable across the male adult age range (DNA methylation by age r = 0.02) but decreased across female adult age range (DNA methylation by age r = - 0.61). One site (cg23722529) with a significant age-by-sex interaction also had a quantitative trait locus (rs17321482) that is a genome-wide significant variant for prostate cancer. The mixed linear model method identified 11 CpG sites associated with the age-by-sex interaction. CONCLUSION: The majority of differences in age-associated DNA methylation trajectories between sexes are present on the X chromosome. Several of these differences occur within genes that have been implicated in sexually dimorphic traits.


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