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Clinical Epigenetics 2012
Secondhand smoke in combination with ambient air pollution exposure is associated with increasedx CpG methylation and decreased expression of IFN-γ in T effector cells and Foxp3 in T regulatory cells in childrenKeywords: Secondhand smoke, Ambient air pollution, IFN-γ, Foxp3, Methylation, Epigenetic regulation, Pediatrics, T effectors, T regulatory cells Abstract: Subjects 7–18?years old were recruited from Fresno (high AAP; n?=?62) and Stanford, CA (low AAP; n?=?40) and divided into SHS-exposed (Fresno: n?=?31, Stanford: n?=?6) and non-SHS-exposed (nSHS; Fresno: n?=?31, Stanford: n?=?34) groups. T cells purified from peripheral blood were assessed for levels of DNA methylation and expression of IFN-γ (in effector T cells) or Foxp3 (in regulatory T cells).Analysis showed a significant increase in mean % CpG methylation of IFN-γ and Foxp3 associated with SHS exposure (IFN-γ: FSHS 62.10%, FnSHS 41.29%, p?<?0.05; SSHS 46.67%, SnSHS 24.85%, p?<?0.05; Foxp3: FSHS 74.60%, FnSHS 54.44%, p?<?0.05; SSHS 62.40%, SnSHS 18.41%, p?<?0.05) and a significant decrease in mean transcription levels of both genes (IFN-γ: FSHS 0.75, FnSHS 1.52, p?<?0.05; SHS 2.25, nSHS 3.53, p?<?0.05; Foxp3: FSHS 0.75, FnSHS 3.29, p?<?0.05; SSHS 4.8, SnSHS 7.2, p?<?0.05). AAP was also associated with hypermethylation (IFN-γ: FSHS vs. SSHS, p?<?0.05; FnSHS vs. SnSHS, p?<?0.05; Foxp3: FSHS vs. SSHS, p?<?0.05; FnSHS vs. SnSHS, p?<?0.05) and decreased transcription of both genes (IFN-γ: FSHS vs. SSHS, p?<?0.05; FnSHS vs. SnSHS, p?<?0.05; Foxp3: FSHS vs. SSHS, p?<?0.05; FnSHS vs. SnSHS, p?<?0.05). Average methylation between AAP- and SHS-only exposures was not significantly different (IFN-γ: p?=?0.15; Foxp3: p?=?0.27), nor was Foxp3 expression (p?=?0.08); IFN-γ expression was significantly decreased in AAP-only subjects (p?<?0.05).Exposures to SHS and AAP are associated with significant hypermethylation and decreased expression of IFN-γ in Teffs and Foxp3 in Tregs. Relative contributions of each exposure to DNA modification and asthma pathogenesis warrant further investigation.Exposure to secondhand smoke (SHS) is associated with a number of adverse health effects, including cancer, cardiovascular disease, and increased frequency and severity of respiratory disease [1]. Per the US Surgeon General’s 2006 report, any exposure to SHS results in increased health risks [1
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