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DNA methylation, colon cancer and Mediterranean diet: results from the EPIC-Italy cohort. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The Mediterranean Diet (MD) may help protect against colon cancer (CC) through mechanisms involving DNA methylation in inflammation-related genes.
  • A study analyzed DNA from individuals within the EPIC cohort to find specific CpG sites associated with both CC and adherence to MD.
  • Out of several CpG sites examined, two were validated, with one site (cg20674490-) showing potential as a molecular mediator for MD's protective effects against CC.

Article Abstract

The biological mechanisms through which adherence to Mediterranean Diet (MD) protects against colon cancer (CC) are poorly understood. Evidence suggests that chronic inflammation may be implicated in the pathway. Both diet and CC are related to epigenetic regulation. We performed a nested case-control study on 161 pairs from the Italian component of the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC) cohort, in which we looked for the methylation signals in DNA extracted from leucocytes associated with both CC and MD in 995 CpGs located in 48 inflammation genes. The DNA methylation signals detected in this analysis were validated in a subgroup of 47 case-control pairs and further replicated (where validated) in 95 new pairs by means of pyrosequencing. Among the CpG sites selected in inflammation-related genes, seven CpG sites were found to be associated with CC status and with MD, in line with its protective effect. Only two CpG sites (cg17968347- and cg20674490-) were validated using bisulphite pyrosequencing and, after replication, we found that DNA methylation of cg20674490- may be a potential molecular mediator explaining the protective effect of MD on CC onset. The use of a 'meet-in-the-middle' approach to identify the overlap between exposure and predictive markers of disease is innovative in studies on the relationship between diet and cancer, in which exposure assessment is difficult and the mechanisms through which the nutrients exert their protective effect is largely unknown.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6691992PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15592294.2019.1629230DOI Listing

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