Epigenome-wide association study of whole blood gene expression in Framingham Heart Study participants provides molecular insight into the potential role of CHRNA5 in cigarette smoking-related lung diseases.
Chen YaoRoby JoehanesRory WilsonToshiko TanakaLuigi FerrucciAnja KretschmerHolger ProkischKatharina SchrammChristian GiegerAnnette PetersMelanie WaldenbergerCarola MarziChristian HerderDaniel LevyPublished in: Clinical epigenetics (2021)
Our results provide a large and comprehensive association study of whole blood DNA methylation with gene expression. Expression platform differences rather than population differences are critical to the replication of cis CpG-transcript pairs. The low reproducibility of trans CpG-transcript pairs suggests that DNA methylation regulates nearby rather than remote gene expression. The putatively causal roles of methylation and expression of CHRNA5 in relation to COPD and lung cancer provide evidence for a mechanistic link between patterns of smoking-related epigenetic variation and lung diseases, and highlight potential therapeutic targets for lung diseases and smoking cessation.