Skip to content
Open access · OA via OpenAlex

Life course socioeconomic status and DNA methylation in genes related to stress reactivity and inflammation: The multi-ethnic study of atherosclerosis

Belinda L. Needham, Jennifer A. Smith, Wei Zhao, Xu Wang, Bhramar Mukherjee, Sharon L. R. Kardia, Carol A. Shively, Teresa E. Seeman, Ching‐Ti Liu, Ava V. Diez Roux

Epigenetics · 2015 · ▲ 223 citations

Abstract

Epigenetic changes, such as DNA methylation, have been hypothesized to provide a link between the social environment and disease development. The purpose of this study was to examine associations between life course measures of socioeconomic status (SES) and DNA methylation (DNAm) in 18 genes related to stress reactivity and inflammation using a multi-level modeling approach that treats DNAm measurements as repeat measures within an individual. DNAm and gene expression were assessed in purified monocytes for a random subsample of 1,264 non-Hispanic white, African-American, and Hispanic participants aged 55-94 from the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA). After correction for multiple testing, we found that low childhood SES was associated with DNAm in 3 stress-related genes (AVP, FKBP5, OXTR) and 2 inflammation-related genes (CCL1, CD1D), low adult SES was associated with DNAm in one stress-related gene (AVP) and 5 inflammation-related genes (CD1D, F8, KLRG1, NLRP12, TLR3), and social mobility was associated with DNAm in 3 stress-related genes (AVP, FKBP5, OXTR) and 7 inflammation-related genes (CCL1, CD1D, F8, KLRG1, NLRP12, PYDC1, TLR3). In general, low SES was associated with increased DNAm. Expression data was available for 7 genes that showed a significant relationship between SES and DNAm. In 5 of these 7 genes (CD1D, F8, FKBP5, KLRG1, NLRP12), DNAm was associated with gene expression for at least one transcript, providing evidence of the potential functional consequences of alterations in DNAm related to SES. The results of this study reflect the biological complexity of epigenetic data and underscore the need for multi-disciplinary approaches to study how DNAm may contribute to the social patterning of disease.

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

Read at source →

Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.1080/15592294.2015.1085139
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-06-03 MST

Cite this

APA
Needham, B.L., Smith, J.A., Zhao, W., Wang, X., Mukherjee, B., Kardia, S.L.R., Shively, C.A., Seeman, T.E., Liu, C., &amp; Roux, A.V.D. (2015). Life course socioeconomic status and DNA methylation in genes related to stress reactivity and inflammation: The multi-ethnic study of atherosclerosis. <em>Epigenetics</em>. https://doi.org/10.1080/15592294.2015.1085139
Vancouver
Needham BL, Smith JA, Zhao W, Wang X, Mukherjee B, Kardia SLR, et al. Life course socioeconomic status and DNA methylation in genes related to stress reactivity and inflammation: The multi-ethnic study of atherosclerosis. Epigenetics. 2015. doi:10.1080/15592294.2015.1085139.
BibTeX
@article{belinda2015Lifeco, title = {Life course socioeconomic status and DNA methylation in genes related to stress reactivity and inflammation: The multi-ethnic study of atherosclerosis}, author = {Belinda L. Needham and Jennifer A. Smith and Wei Zhao and Xu Wang and Bhramar Mukherjee and Sharon L. R. Kardia and Carol A. Shively and Teresa E. Seeman and Ching‐Ti Liu and Ava V. Diez Roux}, journal = {Epigenetics}, year = {2015}, doi = {10.1080/15592294.2015.1085139}, }

Research neighborhood

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

Related findings