Frontiers in Physiology (Jul 2019)

Personalized Epigenome Remodeling Under Biochemical and Psychological Changes During Long-Term Isolation Environment

  • Fengji Liang,
  • Fengji Liang,
  • Ke Lv,
  • Ke Lv,
  • Yue Wang,
  • Yanhong Yuan,
  • Liang Lu,
  • Qiang Feng,
  • Xiaolu Jing,
  • Honghui Wang,
  • Changning Liu,
  • Simon Rayner,
  • Shukuan Ling,
  • Hailong Chen,
  • Yumin Wan,
  • Wanlong Zhou,
  • Li He,
  • Bin Wu,
  • Lina Qu,
  • Shanguang Chen,
  • Jianghui Xiong,
  • Jianghui Xiong,
  • Yinghui Li,
  • Yinghui Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2019.00932
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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It has been reported that several aspects of human health could be disturbed during a long-term isolated environment (for instance, the Mars-500 mission), including psychiatric disorders, circadian disruption, temporal dynamics of gut microbiota, immune responses, and physical-activity-related neuromuscular performance. Nevertheless, the mechanisms underlying these disturbances and the interactions among different aspects of human adaptation to extreme environments remain to be elucidated. Epigenetic features, like DNA methylation, might be a linking mechanism that explains the involvement of environmental factors between the human genome and the outcome of health. We conducted an exploration of personalized longitudinal DNA methylation patterns of the peripheral whole blood cells, profiling six subjects across six sampling points in the Mars-500 mission. Specifically, we developed a Personalized Epigenetic-Phenotype Synchronization Analysis (PeSa) algorithm to explore glucose- and mood-state-synchronized DNA methylation sites, focusing on finding the dynamic associations between epigenetic patterns and phenotypes in each individual, and exploring the underling epigenetic connections between glucose and mood-state disturbance. Results showed that DMPs (differentially methylated-probes) were significantly enriched in pathways related to glucose metabolism (Type II diabetes mellitus pathway), mood state (Long-term depression) and circadian rhythm (Circadian entrainment pathway) during the mission. Furthermore, our data revealed individualized glucose-synchronized and mood-state-synchronized DNA methylation sites, and PTPRN2 was found to be associated with both glucose and mood state disturbances across all six subjects. Our findings suggest that personalized phenotype-synchronized epigenetic features could reflect the effects on the human body, including the disturbances of glucose and mood-states. The association analysis of DNA methylation and phenotypes, like the PeSa analysis, could provide new possibilities in understanding the intrinsic relationship between phenotypic changes of the human body adapting to long-term isolation environmental factors.

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