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Short-Term Exposure of PM2.5and Epigenetic Aging: A Quasi-Experimental Study

  • Xu Gao
  • , Jing Huang
  • , Andres Cardenas
  • , Yan Zhao
  • , Yanyan Sun
  • , Jiawei Wang
  • , Lijun Xue
  • , Andrea A. Baccarelli
  • , Xinbiao Guo
  • , Ling Zhang
  • , Shaowei Wu
  • Peking University
  • University of California at Berkeley
  • Capital Medical University
  • Columbia University
  • Key Laboratory for Disease Prevention and Control and Health Promotion of Shaanxi Province
  • Ministry of Health of People's Republic of China

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

46 Scopus citations

Abstract

Epigenetic age (EA) is an emerging DNA methylation-based biomarker of biological aging, but whether EA is causally associated with short-term PM2.5 exposure remains unknown. We conducted a quasi-experimental study of 26 healthy adults to test whether short-term PM2.5 exposure accelerates seven EAs with three health examinations performed before, during, and after multiple PM2.5 pollution waves. Seven EAs were derived from the DNA methylation profiles of the Illumina HumanMethylationEPIC BeadChip from CD4+ T-helper cells. We found that an increase of 10 μg/m3 in the 0-24 h personal PM2.5 exposure prior to health examinations was associated with a 0.035, 0.035, 0.050, 0.055, 0.052, and 0.037-unit increase in the changes of z-scored DNA methylation age acceleration (AA,Horvath), AA (Hannum), AA (GrimAge), DunedinPoAm, mortality risk score (MS), and epiTOC, respectively (p-values < 0.05). The same increase in the 24-48 h average personal PM2.5 exposure yielded smaller effects but was still robustly associated with the changes in AA (GrimAge), DunedinPoAm, and MS. Such acute aging effects of PM2.5 were mediated by the changes in several circulating biomarkers, including EC-SOD and sCD40L, with up to ∼28% mediated proportions. Our findings demonstrated that short-term PM2.5 exposure could accelerate aging reflected by DNA methylation profiles via blood coagulation, oxidative stress, and systematic inflammation.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)14690-14700
Number of pages11
JournalEnvironmental Science and Technology
Volume56
Issue number20
DOIs
StatePublished - 18 Oct 2022

Keywords

  • Aging
  • Air pollution
  • DNA methylation
  • PM
  • epigenetic age

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