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. 2015 Jul 29:8:321.
doi: 10.1186/s13104-015-1286-6.

Effect of maternal gestational weight gain on offspring DNA methylation: a follow-up to the ALSPAC cohort study

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Effect of maternal gestational weight gain on offspring DNA methylation: a follow-up to the ALSPAC cohort study

Jon Bohlin et al. BMC Res Notes. .

Abstract

Background: Several epidemiologic studies indicate that maternal gestational weight gain (GWG) influences health outcomes in offspring. Any underlying mechanisms have, however, not been established. A recent study of 88 children based on the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC) cohort examined the methylation levels at 1,505 Cytosine-Guanine methylation (CpG) loci and found several to be significantly associated with maternal weight gain between weeks 0 and 18 of gestation. Since these results could not be replicated we wanted to examine associations between 0 and 18 week GWG and genome-wide methylation levels using the Infinium HumanMethylation450 BeadChip (450K) platform on a larger sample size, i.e. 729 newborns sampled from the Norwegian Mother and Child Cohort Study (MoBa).

Results: We found no CpG loci associated with 0-18 week GWG after adjusting for the set of covariates used in the ALSPAC study (i.e. child's sex and maternal age) and for multiple testing (q > 0.9, both 1,505 and 473,731 tests). Hence, none of the CpG loci linked with the genes found significantly associated with 0-18 week GWG in the ALSPAC study were significant in our study.

Conclusions: The inconsistency in the results with the ALSPAC study with regards to the 0-18 week GWG model may arise for several reasons: sampling from different populations, dissimilar methylome coverage, sample size and/or false positive findings.

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Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
GWG, between weeks 0 and 18. a Shows a qq-plot and the genomic inflation factor (λ) for the p values of 0–18 weeks GWG. The p values were taken from a model that was adjusted for child’s sex and maternal age. b Is the corresponding Manhattan-plot.

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