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Enrichment of genomic pathways based on differential DNA methylation profiles associated with chronic musculoskeletal pain in older adults: An exploratory study
Author(s) -
Soamy Montesino-Goicolea,
Puja Sinha,
Zhiguang Huo,
Asha Rani,
Thomas C. Foster,
Yenisel CruzAlmeida
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
molecular pain
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.081
H-Index - 83
ISSN - 1744-8069
DOI - 10.1177/1744806920966902
Subject(s) - dna methylation , epigenetics , cpg site , differentially methylated regions , chronic pain , dnam , biology , medicine , bioinformatics , genetics , gene , neuroscience , gene expression
Our study aimed to identify differentially methylated CpGs/regions and their enriched genomic pathways associated with underlying chronic musculoskeletal pain in older individuals. We recruited cognitively healthy older adults with ( n  = 20) and without ( n  = 9) self-reported musculoskeletal pain and collected DNA from peripheral blood that was analyzed using MethylationEPIC arrays. We identified 31,739 hypermethylated CpG and 10,811 hypomethylated CpG probes ( p s ≤ 0.05). All CpG probes were clustered into 5966 regions, among which 600 regions were differentially methylated at p ≤ 0.05 level, including 294 hypermethylated regions and 306 hypomethylated regions (differentially methylated regions). Ingenuity pathway enrichment analysis revealed that the pain-related differentially methylated regions were enriched across multiple pathways. The top 10 canonical pathways were linked to cellular signaling processes related to immune responses (i.e. antigen presentation, programed cell death 1 receptor/PD-1 ligand 1, interleukin-4, OX40 signaling, T cell exhaustion, and apoptosis) and gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor signaling. Further, Weighted Gene Correlation Network Analysis revealed a comethylation network module in the pain group that was not preserved in the control group, where the hub gene was the cyclic adenosine monophosphate-dependent transcription factor ATF-2. Our preliminary findings provide new epigenetic insights into the role of aberrant immune signaling in musculoskeletal pain in older adults while further supporting involvement of dysfunctional GABAergic signaling mechanisms in chronic pain. Our findings need to be urgently replicated in larger cohorts as they may serve as a basis for developing and targeting future interventions.

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