Environment International (Nov 2023)

Air pollution and epigenetic aging among Black and White women in the US

  • Sarah H. Koenigsberg,
  • Che-Jung Chang,
  • Jennifer Ish,
  • Zongli Xu,
  • Jacob K. Kresovich,
  • Kaitlyn G. Lawrence,
  • Joel D. Kaufman,
  • Dale P. Sandler,
  • Jack A. Taylor,
  • Alexandra J. White

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 181
p. 108270

Abstract

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Background: DNA methylation-based measures of biological aging have been associated with air pollution and may link pollutant exposures to aging-related health outcomes. However, evidence is inconsistent and there is little information for Black women. Objective: We examined associations of ambient particulate matter <2.5 μm and <10 μm in diameter (PM2.5 and PM10) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2) with DNA methylation, including epigenetic aging and individual CpG sites, and evaluated whether associations differ between Black and non-Hispanic White (NHW) women. Methods: Validated models were used to estimate annual average outdoor residential exposure to PM2.5, PM10, and NO2 in a sample of self-identified Black (n=633) and NHW (n=3493) women residing in the contiguous US. We used sampling-weighted generalized linear regression to examine the effects of pollutants on six epigenetic aging measures (primary: DunedinPACE, GrimAgeAccel, and PhenoAgeAccel; secondary: Horvath intrinsic epigenetic age acceleration [EAA], Hannum extrinsic EAA, and skin & blood EAA) and epigenome-wide associations for individual CpG sites. Wald tests of nested models with and without interaction terms were used to examine effect measure modification by race/ethnicity. Results: Black participants had higher median air pollution exposure than NHW participants. GrimAgeAccel was associated with both PM10 and NO2 among Black participants, (Q4 versus Q1, PM10: β=1.09, 95% CI: 0.16–2.03; NO2: β=1.01, 95% CI 0.08–1.94) but not NHW participants (p-for-heterogeneity: PM10=0.10, NO2=0.20). In Black participants, we also observed a monotonic exposure–response relationship between NO2 and DunedinPACE (Q4 versus Q1, NO2: β=0.029, 95% CI: 0.004–0.055; p-for-trend=0.03), which was not observed in NHW participants (p-for-heterogeneity=0.09). In the EWAS, pollutants were significantly associated with differential methylation at 19 CpG sites in Black women and one in NHW women. Conclusions: In a US-wide cohort study, our findings suggest that air pollution is associated with DNA methylation alterations consistent with higher epigenetic aging among Black, but not NHW, women.

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