Trans-ancestry epigenome-wide association meta-analysis of DNA methylation with lifetime cannabis use.
Fang FangBryan C QuachKaitlyn G LawrenceJenny van DongenJesse A MarksSara LundgrenMingkuan LinVeronika V OdintsovaRicardo CosteiraZongli XuLinran ZhouMeisha MandalYujing XiaJacqueline M VinkLaura J BierutMiina OllikainenJack A TaylorJordana T BellJaakko A KaprioDorret I BoomsmaKe XuDale R SandlerDana B HancockEric O JohnsonPublished in: Molecular psychiatry (2023)
Cannabis is widely used worldwide, yet its links to health outcomes are not fully understood. DNA methylation can serve as a mediator to link environmental exposures to health outcomes. We conducted an epigenome-wide association study (EWAS) of peripheral blood-based DNA methylation and lifetime cannabis use (ever vs. never) in a meta-analysis including 9436 participants (7795 European and 1641 African ancestry) from seven cohorts. Accounting for effects of cigarette smoking, our trans-ancestry EWAS meta-analysis revealed four CpG sites significantly associated with lifetime cannabis use at a false discovery rate of 0.05 [Formula: see text]: cg22572071 near gene ADGRF1, cg15280358 in ADAM12, cg00813162 in ACTN1, and cg01101459 near LINC01132. Additionally, our EWAS analysis in participants who never smoked cigarettes identified another epigenome-wide significant CpG site, cg14237301 annotated to APOBR. We used a leave-one-out approach to evaluate methylation scores constructed as a weighted sum of the significant CpGs. The best model can explain 3.79% of the variance in lifetime cannabis use. These findings unravel the DNA methylation changes associated with lifetime cannabis use that are independent of cigarette smoking and may serve as a starting point for further research on the mechanisms through which cannabis exposure impacts health outcomes.
Keyphrases
- dna methylation
- genome wide
- systematic review
- gene expression
- peripheral blood
- copy number
- smoking cessation
- small molecule
- magnetic resonance
- genome wide association study
- air pollution
- randomized controlled trial
- wastewater treatment
- long non coding rna
- magnetic resonance imaging
- case control
- preterm infants
- long noncoding rna
- human milk
- genome wide identification
- preterm birth