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Epigenetic Signatures of Cigarette Smoking

Roby Joehanes, Allan C. Just, Riccardo E. Marioni, Luke C. Pilling, Lindsay M. Reynolds, Pooja R. Mandaviya, Weihua Guan, Tao Xu, Cathy E. Elks, Stella Aslibekyan, Hortensia Moreno-Macías, Jennifer A. Smith, Jennifer A. Brody, Radhika Dhingra, Paul Yousefi

Circulation Cardiovascular Genetics · 2016 · ▲ 1,022 citations

Abstract

Background— DNA methylation leaves a long-term signature of smoking exposure and is one potential mechanism by which tobacco exposure predisposes to adverse health outcomes, such as cancers, osteoporosis, lung, and cardiovascular disorders. Methods and Results— To comprehensively determine the association between cigarette smoking and DNA methylation, we conducted a meta-analysis of genome-wide DNA methylation assessed using the Illumina BeadChip 450K array on 15 907 blood-derived DNA samples from participants in 16 cohorts (including 2433 current, 6518 former, and 6956 never smokers). Comparing current versus never smokers, 2623 cytosine–phosphate–guanine sites (CpGs), annotated to 1405 genes, were statistically significantly differentially methylated at Bonferroni threshold of P <1×10 −7 (18 760 CpGs at false discovery rate <0.05). Genes annotated to these CpGs were enriched for associations with several smoking-related traits in genome-wide studies including pulmonary function, cancers, inflammatory diseases, and heart disease. Comparing former versus never smokers, 185 of the CpGs that differed between current and never smokers were significant P <1×10 −7 (2623 CpGs at false discovery rate <0.05), indicating a pattern of persistent altered methylation, with attenuation, after smoking cessation. Transcriptomic integration identified effects on gene expression at many differentially methylated CpGs. Conclusions— Cigarette smoking has a broad impact on genome-wide methylation that, at many loci, persists many years after smoking cessation. Many of the differentially methylated genes were novel genes with respect to biological effects of smoking and might represent therapeutic targets for prevention or treatment of tobacco-related diseases. Methylation at these sites could also serve as sensitive and stable biomarkers of lifetime exposure to tobacco smoke.

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Provenance

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.1161/circgenetics.116.001506
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2026-06-09 MST

Cite this

APA
Joehanes, R., Just, A.C., Marioni, R.E., Pilling, L.C., Reynolds, L.M., Mandaviya, P.R., Guan, W., Xu, T., Elks, C.E., Aslibekyan, S., Moreno-Macías, H., Smith, J.A., Brody, J.A., Dhingra, R., Yousefi, P., Pankow, J.S., Kunze, S., Shah, S., McRae, A.F., &amp; Lohman, K. (2016). Epigenetic Signatures of Cigarette Smoking. <em>Circulation Cardiovascular Genetics</em>. https://doi.org/10.1161/circgenetics.116.001506
Vancouver
Joehanes R, Just AC, Marioni RE, Pilling LC, Reynolds LM, Mandaviya PR, et al. Epigenetic Signatures of Cigarette Smoking. Circulation Cardiovascular Genetics. 2016. doi:10.1161/circgenetics.116.001506.
BibTeX
@article{roby2016Epigen, title = {Epigenetic Signatures of Cigarette Smoking}, author = {Roby Joehanes and Allan C. Just and Riccardo E. Marioni and Luke C. Pilling and Lindsay M. Reynolds and Pooja R. Mandaviya and Weihua Guan and Tao Xu and Cathy E. Elks and Stella Aslibekyan and Hortensia Moreno-Macías and Jennifer A. Smith and Jennifer A. Brody and Radhika Dhingra and Paul Yousefi and James S. Pankow and Sonja Kunze and Sonia Shah and Allan F. McRae and Kurt Lohman and Jin Sha and Devin Absher and Luigi Ferrucci and Wei Zhao and Ellen W. Demerath}, journal = {Circulation Cardiovascular Genetics}, year = {2016}, doi = {10.1161/circgenetics.116.001506}, }

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