DNA methylation differences after exposure to prenatal famine are common and timing- and sex-specific
Leiden University Medical Center · Columbia University · +1 more institution
Abstract
Prenatal famine in humans has been associated with various later-life consequences, depending on the gestational timing of the insult and the sex of the exposed individual. Epigenetic mechanisms have been proposed to underlie these associations. Indeed, animal studies and our early human data on the imprinted IGF2 locus indicated a link between prenatal nutritional and DNA methylation. However, it remains unclear how common changes in DNA methylation are and whether they are sex- and timing-specific paralleling the later-life consequences of prenatal famine exposure. To this end, we investigated the methylation of 15 loci implicated in growth and metabolic disease in individuals who were prenatally exposed to…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 29.29
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 47
Authors
8Topics & keywords
- DNA methylation
- Biology
- Methylation
- Epigenetics
- Famine
- Genetics
- Physiology
- Gene
- Zero hunger