Nutrients (Nov 2020)

DNA Methylation Profiles of Vegans and Non-Vegetarians in the Adventist Health Study-2 Cohort

  • Fayth L. Miles,
  • Andrew Mashchak,
  • Valery Filippov,
  • Michael J. Orlich,
  • Penelope Duerksen-Hughes,
  • Xin Chen,
  • Charles Wang,
  • Kimberly Siegmund,
  • Gary E. Fraser

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12123697
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 12
p. 3697

Abstract

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We sought to determine if DNA methylation patterns differed between vegans and non-vegetarians in the Adventist Health Study-2 cohort. Genome-wide DNA methylation derived from buffy coat was profiled in 62 vegans and 142 non-vegetarians. Using linear regression, methylation of CpG sites and genes was categorized or summarized according to various genic/intergenic regions and CpG island-related regions, as well as the promoter. Methylation of genes was measured as the average methylation of available CpG’s annotated to the nominated region of the respective gene. A permutation method defining the null distribution adapted from Storey et al. was used to adjust for false discovery. Differences in methylation of several CpG sites and genes were detected at a false discovery rate METTL1). Although a limited number of differentially methylated features were detected in the current study, the false discovery method revealed that a much larger proportion of differentially methylated genes and sites exist, and could be detected with a larger sample size. Our findings suggest modest differences in DNA methylation in vegans and non-vegetarians, with a much greater number of detectable significant differences expected with a larger sample.

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