Login / Signup

Refraining from use diminishes cannabis-associated epigenetic changes in human sperm.

Rose SchrottSusan K MurphyJennifer L ModliszewskiDillon E KingBendu HillNilda Itchon-RamosDouglas RaburnThomas PriceEdward D LevinRyan VandreyDavid L CorcoranScott H KollinsJohn T Mitchell
Published in: Environmental epigenetics (2021)
Cannabis use alters sperm DNA methylation, but the potential reversibility of these changes is unknown. Semen samples from cannabis users and non-user controls were collected at baseline and again following a 77-day period of cannabis abstinence (one spermatogenic cycle). Users and controls did not significantly differ by demographics or semen analyses. Whole-genome bisulfite sequencing identified 163 CpG sites with significantly different DNA methylation in sperm between groups (P < 2.94 × 10-9). Genes associated with altered CpG sites were enriched with those involved in development, including cardiogenesis and neurodevelopment. Many of the differences in sperm DNA methylation between groups were diminished after cannabis abstinence. These results indicate that sustained cannabis abstinence significantly reduces the number of sperm showing cannabis-associated alterations at genes important for early development.
Keyphrases
  • dna methylation
  • genome wide
  • gene expression
  • smoking cessation
  • endothelial cells
  • copy number
  • climate change
  • transcription factor
  • induced pluripotent stem cells