Skip to content
Citation only via OpenAlex

DNA methylation in individuals with anorexia nervosa and in matched normal‐eater controls: A genome‐wide study

Linda Booij, Kevin F. Casey, Juliana Mazanek Antunes, Moshe Szyf, Ridha Joober, Mimi Israël, Howard Steiger

International Journal of Eating Disorders · 2015 · ▲ 95 citations

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Evidence associates anorexia nervosa (AN) with epigenetic alterations that could contribute to illness risk or entrenchment. We investigated the extent to which AN is associated with a distinct methylation profile compared to that seen in normal-eater women. METHOD: Genome-wide methylation profiles, obtained using DNA from whole blood, were determined in 29 women currently ill with AN (10 with AN-restrictive type, 19 with AN-binge/purge type) and 15 normal-weight, normal-eater control women, using 450 K Illumina bead arrays. RESULTS: Regardless of type, AN patients showed higher and less-variable global methylation patterns than controls. False Discovery Rate corrected comparisons identified 14 probes that were hypermethylated in women with AN relative to levels obtained in normal-eater controls, representing genes thought to be associated with histone acetylation, RNA modification, cholesterol storage and lipid transport, and dopamine and glutamate signaling. Age of onset was significantly associated with differential methylation in gene pathways involved in development of the brain and spinal cord, while chronicity of illness was significantly linked to differential methylation in pathways involved with synaptogenesis, neurocognitive deficits, anxiety, altered social functioning, and bowel, kidney, liver and immune function. DISCUSSION: Although pre-existing differences cannot be ruled out, our findings are consistent with the idea of secondary alterations in methylation at genomic regions pertaining to social-emotional impairments and physical sequelae that are commonly seen in AN patients. Further investigation is needed to establish the clinical relevance of the affected genes in AN, and, importantly, reversibility of effects observed with nutritional rehabilitation and treatment.

◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:

Read at source →

Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.1002/eat.22374
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-06-03 MST

Cite this

APA
Booij, L., Casey, K.F., Antunes, J.M., Szyf, M., Joober, R., Israël, M., &amp; Steiger, H. (2015). DNA methylation in individuals with anorexia nervosa and in matched normal‐eater controls: A genome‐wide study. <em>International Journal of Eating Disorders</em>. https://doi.org/10.1002/eat.22374
Vancouver
Booij L, Casey KF, Antunes JM, Szyf M, Joober R, Israël M, et al. DNA methylation in individuals with anorexia nervosa and in matched normal‐eater controls: A genome‐wide study. International Journal of Eating Disorders. 2015. doi:10.1002/eat.22374.
BibTeX
@article{linda2015DNAmet, title = {DNA methylation in individuals with anorexia nervosa and in matched normal‐eater controls: A genome‐wide study}, author = {Linda Booij and Kevin F. Casey and Juliana Mazanek Antunes and Moshe Szyf and Ridha Joober and Mimi Israël and Howard Steiger}, journal = {International Journal of Eating Disorders}, year = {2015}, doi = {10.1002/eat.22374}, }

Research neighborhood

References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.

Related findings