A multi-omics approach to investigate the inflammatory response to life course socioeconomic position

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Abstract

Aim: Inflammation represents a potential pathway through which socioeconomic position (SEP) is biologically embedded. Materials & methods: We analyzed inflammatory biomarkers in response to life course SEP by integrating multi-omics DNA-methylation, gene expression and protein level in 178 European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition-Italy participants. Results & conclusion: We identified 61 potential cis acting CpG loci whose methylation levels were associated with gene expression at a Bonferroni correction. We examined the relationships between life course SEP and these 61 cis-acting regulatory methylation sites individually and jointly using several scores. Less-advantaged SEP participants exhibit, later in life, a lower inflammatory methylome score, suggesting an overall increased expression of the corresponding inflammatory genes or proteins, supporting the hypothesis that SEP impacts adult physiology through inflammation.

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Castagné, R., Kelly-Irving, M., Krogh, V., Palli, D., Panico, S., Sacerdote, C., … Delpierre, C. (2020). A multi-omics approach to investigate the inflammatory response to life course socioeconomic position. Epigenomics, 12(15), 1287–1302. https://doi.org/10.2217/epi-2019-0261

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