Socioeconomic status and DNA methylation from birth through mid-childhood: a prospective study in Project Viva.

View Abstract

We investigated associations of prenatal socioeconomic status (SES) with DNA methylation at birth, and to explore persistence of associations into early (∼3 years) and mid-childhood (∼7 years) among 609 mother-child pairs in a Boston-area prebirth cohort. First, we created a prenatal SES index comprising individual- and neighborhood-level metrics and examined associations of low (lowest 10%) versus high (upper 90%) SES with genome-wide DNA methylation in cord blood via the Infinium HumanMethylation450 BeadChip. Next, we evaluated persistence of associations detected in cord blood with DNA methylation of the same CpG sites measured in peripheral leukocytes in early- and mid-childhood. Low prenatal SES was associated with methylation at CpG sites near , , and . The relationship with persisted into early childhood.

Investigators
Abbreviation
Epigenomics
Publication Date
2019-09-11
Pubmed ID
31509016
Medium
Print-Electronic
Full Title
Socioeconomic status and DNA methylation from birth through mid-childhood: a prospective study in Project Viva.
Authors
Laubach ZM, Perng W, Cardenas A, Rifas-Shiman SL, Oken E, DeMeo D, Litonjua AA, Duca RC, Godderis L, Baccarelli A, Hivert MF