DNA methylation patterns in umbilical cord blood from infants of methadone maintained opioid dependent mothers.
Publication/Presentation Date
7-27-2024
Abstract
Methadone maintenance treatment for opioid dependent mothers is standard of care. Infants of methadone maintained opioid dependent (MMOD) mothers have better outcomes compared to infants of opioid dependent mothers without treatment. However, when compared to non-exposed infants, infants of MMOD mothers are associated with worse outcomes. We conducted a pilot study to examine genome wide differential DNA methylation using cord blood samples from sixteen term and near-term infants of MMOD and opioid naïve mothers, excluding Infants with chorioamnionitis. A total of 152 differentially methylated loci were identified at a difference > + 2, < - 2 and p-value < 0.05. There were 90 hypermethylated loci (59 annotated genes) and 62 hypomethylated loci (38 annotated genes) observed. The hypermethylated and hypomethylated DNA changes involved multiple genes, pathways and networks that may explain some of the changes seen in infants of MMOD mothers. Top hypermethylated and hypomethylated genes involved areas of cell growth, neurodevelopment, vision and xenobiotic metabolism functions. Our data may explain the role of key pathways and genes relevant to neonatal outcomes seen from methadone exposure in pregnancy. Functional studies on the identified pathways and genes could lead to improved understanding of the mechanisms and identify areas for intervention.
Volume
14
Issue
1
First Page
17298
Last Page
17298
ISSN
2045-2322
Published In/Presented At
Adegboyega, O., Gayen Nee' Betal, S., Urday, P., Huang, R., Bodycot, K., Al-Kouatly, H. B., Solarin, K., Chan, J. S. Y., Addya, S., Boelig, R. C., & Aghai, Z. H. (2024). DNA methylation patterns in umbilical cord blood from infants of methadone maintained opioid dependent mothers. Scientific reports, 14(1), 17298. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-66899-w
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences | Pediatrics
PubMedID
39068260
Department(s)
Department of Pediatrics
Document Type
Article