Gene hypermethylation in blood leukocytes in humans long term after radiation exposure – Validation set

Hypermethylation of СpG islands in the promoter regions of several genes with basic protective function in blood leukocytes of individuals exposed to ionizing radiation long time ago (2–46 years), and differential effects of age and radiation exposure on hypermethylation was reported in our previous...

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Published inEnvironmental pollution (1987) Vol. 234; pp. 935 - 942
Main Authors Kuzmina, Nina S., Lapteva, Nellya Sh, Rusinova, Galina G., Azizova, Tamara V., Vyazovskaya, Natalya S., Rubanovich, Alexander V.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Elsevier Ltd 01.03.2018
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ISSN0269-7491
1873-6424
1873-6424
DOI10.1016/j.envpol.2017.12.039

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Summary:Hypermethylation of СpG islands in the promoter regions of several genes with basic protective function in blood leukocytes of individuals exposed to ionizing radiation long time ago (2–46 years), and differential effects of age and radiation exposure on hypermethylation was reported in our previous work. To validate these results, epigenetic modifications were assessed in an independent series of 49 nuclear industry workers from the “Mayak” facility (67–84 years old at sampling) with documented individual accumulated doses from the prolonged external γ-radiation exposure (95.9–409.5 cGy, end of work with radiation:0.3–39 years ago), and in 50 non-exposed persons matched by age. In addition to the genes analyzed before (RASSF1A, p16/INK4A, p14/ARF, GSTP1), four additional loci were analyzed: TP53, ATM, SOD3, ESR1. The frequency of individuals displaying promoter methylation of at least one of the 8 genes (71.4%) was significantly higher in exposed group as compared to the control group (40%), p = .002, OR = 3.75. A significantly elevated frequency of individuals with hypermethylated СpG islands in GSTP1, TP53, SOD3 promoters was revealed among exposed subjects as compared to the control group (p = .012, OR = 8.41; p = .041, OR = 4.02 and p = .009, OR = 3.42, respectively). A similar trend (p = .12, OR = 3.06) was observed for the p16/INK4A gene. As a whole, p16/INK4A and GSTP1 promoter hypermethylation in irradiated subjects from both previously and currently analyzed groups was pronounced. Thus, the direction of the effects was fully confirmed, suggesting the result reproducibility. No statistically significant correlation between promoter methylation and individual radiation dose was found. Further studies are required to create an array of blood epigenetic markers of radiation exposure associating with premature aging and age-related diseases and to accurately evaluate radiation-added effect across the range of doses. The results of studies of epigenetic changes in two independent samples of irradiated subjects indicated the significance of radiation factor in the induction of hypermethylation of CpG islands in gene promoters that is revealed in blood cells years and decades after exposure. [Display omitted] •Gene methylation in blood cells of irradiated humans from two samples was studied.•Unidirectional effects were found in exposed subjects in both independent samples.•Promoter methylation of several loci showed association with radiation exposure.•Gene hypermethylation detectable long term after radiation exposure was confirmed.•Hypermethylated genes are potentially related to age-dependent diseases.
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ISSN:0269-7491
1873-6424
1873-6424
DOI:10.1016/j.envpol.2017.12.039