Genome-wide methylation study identifies an IL-13–induced epigenetic signature in asthmatic airways

J Nicodemus-Johnson, KA Naughton… - American journal of …, 2016 - atsjournals.org
J Nicodemus-Johnson, KA Naughton, J Sudi, K Hogarth, ET Naurekas, DL Nicolae
American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine, 2016atsjournals.org
Rationale: Epigenetic changes to airway cells have been proposed as important modulators
of the effects of environmental exposures on airway diseases, yet no study to date has
shown epigenetic responses to exposures in the airway that correlate with disease state.
The type 2 cytokine IL-13 is a key mediator of allergic airway diseases, such as asthma, and
is up-regulated in response to many asthma-promoting exposures. Objectives: To directly
study the epigenetic response of airway epithelial cells (AECs) to IL-13 and test whether IL …
Rationale: Epigenetic changes to airway cells have been proposed as important modulators of the effects of environmental exposures on airway diseases, yet no study to date has shown epigenetic responses to exposures in the airway that correlate with disease state. The type 2 cytokine IL-13 is a key mediator of allergic airway diseases, such as asthma, and is up-regulated in response to many asthma-promoting exposures.
Objectives: To directly study the epigenetic response of airway epithelial cells (AECs) to IL-13 and test whether IL-13–induced epigenetic changes differ between individuals with and without asthma.
Methods: Genome-wide DNA methylation and gene expression patterns were studied in 58 IL-13–treated and untreated primary AEC cultures and validated in freshly isolated cells of subjects with and without asthma using the Illumina Human Methylation 450K and HumanHT-12 BeadChips. IL-13–mediated comethylation modules were identified and correlated with clinical phenotypes using weighted gene coexpression network analysis.
Measurements and Main Results: IL-13 altered global DNA methylation patterns in cultured AECs and were significantly enriched near genes associated with asthma. Importantly, a significant proportion of this IL-13 epigenetic signature was validated in freshly isolated AECs from subjects with asthma and clustered into two distinct modules, with module 1 correlated with asthma severity and lung function and module 2 with eosinophilia.
Conclusions: These results suggest that a single exposure of IL-13 may selectively induce long-lasting DNA methylation changes in asthmatic airways that alter specific AEC pathways and contribute to asthma phenotypes.
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