@article{bddd38a37f2e490581eba9dca6e3f108,
title = "Presence of an epigenetic signature of prenatal cigarette smoke exposure in childhood",
abstract = "Prenatal exposure to tobacco smoke has lifelong health consequences. Epigenetic signatures such as differences in DNA methylation (DNAm) may be a biomarker of exposure and, further, might have functional significance for how in utero tobacco exposure may influence disease risk. Differences in infant DNAm associated with maternal smoking during pregnancy have been identified. Here we assessed whether these infant DNAm patterns are detectible in early childhood, whether they are specific to smoking, and whether childhood DNAm can classify prenatal smoke exposure status. Using the Infinium 450. K array, we measured methylation at 26 CpG loci that were previously associated with prenatal smoking in infant cord blood from 572 children, aged 3-5, with differing prenatal exposure to cigarette smoke in the Study to Explore Early Development (SEED). Striking concordance was found between the pattern of prenatal smoking associated DNAm among preschool aged children in SEED and those observed at birth in other studies. These DNAm changes appear to be tobacco-specific. Support vector machine classification models and 10-fold cross-validation were applied to show classification accuracy for childhood DNAm at these 26 sites as a biomarker of prenatal smoking exposure. Classification models showed prenatal exposure to smoking can be assigned with 81% accuracy using childhood DNAm patterns at these 26 loci. These findings support the potential for blood-derived DNAm measurements to serve as biomarkers for prenatal exposure.",
author = "Christine Ladd-Acosta and Chang Shu and Lee, {Brian K.} and Nicole Gidaya and Alison Singer and Schieve, {Laura A.} and Schendel, {Diana E.} and Nicole Jones and Daniels, {Julie L.} and Windham, {Gayle C.} and Newschaffer, {Craig J.} and Croen, {Lisa A.} and Feinberg, {Andrew P.} and {Daniele Fallin}, M.",
note = "Funding Information: We would like to thank Dr. Homayoon Farzadegan, Stacey Cayetano, Samantha Bragan, and Brett Purinton from the Johns Hopkins Biological Repository for overseeing, isolating DNA, pulling, and plating the SEED DNA samples, Arni Runarsson at Johns Hopkins Epigenetics Center for running the Illumina 450 K methylation BeadChips. The DNA methylation analyses were funded by Autism Speaks. The SEED recruitment and data support was funded through six cooperative agreements from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: Cooperative Agreement Number U10DD000180 , Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment ; Cooperative Agreement Number U10DD000181 , Kaiser Foundation Research Institute (CA); Cooperative Agreement Number U10DD000182 , University of Pennsylvania ; Cooperative Agreement Number U10DD000183 , Johns Hopkins University ; Cooperative Agreement Number U10DD000184 , University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill ; and Cooperative Agreement Number U10DD000498 , Michigan State University . An earlier version of this work was presented at the 2013 Epigenomics of Common Disease conference in Cambridge, UK. Funding Information: This work was supported by Autism Speaks (Grant 7659 to M.D.F.); the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (Grants 5U10DD000180, 5U10DD000181, 5U10DD000182, 5U10DD000183 (Maryland site of SEED study, M.D.F.), 5U10DD000184). The findings and conclusions in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official position of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2015 Elsevier Inc.",
year = "2016",
month = jan,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/j.envres.2015.11.014",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "144",
pages = "139--148",
journal = "Environmental Research",
issn = "0013-9351",
publisher = "Academic Press Inc.",
}