Publication: Variation of PEAR1 DNA methylation influences platelet and leukocyte function.
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BioMed Central (BMC)
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Platelet-endothelial aggregation receptor 1 (PEAR-1) is a transmembrane receptor involved in platelet activation and megakaryopoiesis whose expression is driven by DNA methylation. PEAR1 variants were associated with differential platelet response to activation and cardiovascular outcomes. We aimed at investigating the link between PEAR1 methylation and platelet and leukocyte function markers in a family-based population. We measured PEAR1 methylation in 605 Moli-family participants with available blood counts, plasma P-selectin and C-reactive protein, whole blood platelet P-selectin, and platelet-leukocyte mixed conjugate measurements. We performed principal component analysis (PCA) to identify groups of highly correlated CpG sites. We used linear mixed regression models (using age, gender, BMI, smoking, alcohol drinking, being a proband for family recruitment, being a member of myocardial infarction (MI) family as fixed effects, and family as a random effect) to evaluate associations between PEAR1 methylation and phenotypes. PEAR1 methylation Factor2, characterized by the previously identified megakaryocyte-specific CpG sites, was inversely associated with platelet-monocyte conjugates, P-selectin, and WBC counts, while positively associated with the platelet distribution width (PDW) and with leukocyte CD11b and L-selectin. Moreover, PEAR1 Factor2 methylation was negatively associated with INFLAscore, a low-grade inflammation score. The latter was partially mediated by the PEAR1 methylation effect on platelet variables. PEAR1 methylation association with WBC measurements and INFLAscore was confirmed in the independent cohort FLEMENGHO. We report a significant link between epigenetic signatures in a platelet functional gene and inflammation-dependent platelet function variability measured in two independent cohorts.
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This work was supported by the āFonds voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek (FWO) Vlaanderenā Research Grant 1508715N and the āProgramma
financiering KU Leuven (PF/10/014)ā. The Moli-Family study was supported by research grants from Telethon foundation (grant GGP04198, L.I.) and the
Italian Ministry of University and Research (MIUR) (Decreto no 1588-19/11/2004). The FLEMENGHO study was supported by the European Union (HEALTH-F7-305507 HOMAGE), the European Research Council (Advanced Researcher Grant 2011-294713-EPLORE and Proof-of-Concept Grant 713601-uPROPHET), and the European Research Area Net for Cardiovascular Diseases (JTC2017-046-PROACT). B.I. was a FWO Post-doctoral Fellow (12M2715N) and a
Postdoctoral Fellow of the Fondazione Umberto Veronesi (years 2017 and 2018), Milan Italy. F.G. was supported by the Italian Ministry of Health 2011
(Young Investigator Grant n. 167/GR-2011-02351736).
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Clin Epigenetics. 2019 Oct 29;11(1):151.





