DNA methylation age is associated with an altered hemostatic profile in a multi-ethnic meta-analysis

TitleDNA methylation age is associated with an altered hemostatic profile in a multi-ethnic meta-analysis
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2018
AuthorsWard-Caviness, CK, Huffman, JE, Evertt, K, Germain, M, van Dongen, J, W. Hill, D, Jhun, MA, Brody, JA, Ghanbari, M, Du, L, Roetker, NS, de Vries, PS, Waldenberger, M, Gieger, C, Wolf, P, Prokisch, H, Koenig, W, O’Donnell, CJ, Levy, D, Liu, C, Truong, V, Wells, PS, Trégouët, D-A, Tang, W, Morrison, AC, Boerwinkle, E, Wiggins, KL, McKnight, B, Guo, X, Psaty, BM, Sotoodenia, N, Boomsma, DI, Willemsen, G, Ligthart, L, Deary, IJ, Zhao, W, Ware, EB, Kardia, SLR, Van Meurs, JBJ, Uitterlinden, AG, Franco, OH, Eriksson, P, Franco-Cereceda, A, Pankow, JS, Johnson, AD, Gagnon, F, Morange, P-E, de Geus, EJC, Starr, JM, Smith, JA, Dehghan, A, Björck, HM, Smith, NL, Peters, A
JournalBlood
ISSN0006-4971
Abstract

Elevated epigenetic age is associated with an altered hemostatic factor profile and lower clotting time (aPTT).DNA methylation age is associated with mRNA levels of fibrinogen in multiple tissues. Many hemostatic factors are associated with age and age-related diseases, however much remains unknown about the biological mechanisms linking aging and hemostatic factors. DNA methylation is a novel means by which to assess epigenetic aging, which is a measure of age and the aging processes as determined by altered epigenetic states. We used a meta-analysis approach to examine the association between measures of epigenetic aging and hemostatic factors, as well as a clotting time measure. For fibrinogen, we used European and African-ancestry participants who were meta-analyzed separately and combined via a random effects meta-analysis. All other measures only included participants of European-ancestry. We found that 1-year higher extrinsic epigenetic age as compared to chronological age was associated with higher fibrinogen (0.004 g/L per year; 95% CI: 0.001, 0.007; P = 0.01) and plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1; 0.13 U/mL per year; 95% CI: 0.07, 0.20; P = 6.6x10-5) concentrations as well as lower activated partial thromboplastin time, a measure of clotting time. We replicated PAI-1 associations using an independent cohort. To further elucidate potential functional mechanisms we associated epigenetic aging with expression levels of the PAI-1 protein encoding gene (SERPINE1) and the three fibrinogen subunit-encoding genes (FGA, FGG, and FGB), in both peripheral blood and aorta intima-media samples. We observed associations between accelerated epigenetic aging and transcription of FGG in both tissues. Collectively, our results indicate that accelerated epigenetic aging is associated with a pro-coagulation hemostatic profile, and that epigenetic aging may regulate hemostasis in part via gene transcription.

URLhttp://www.bloodjournal.org/content/early/2018/07/24/blood-2018-02-831347
DOI10.1182/blood-2018-02-831347