Plasma homocysteine (Hcy) is a thiol-containing amino acid product of methionine metabolism(Reference McCully1). Methionine is converted to S-adenosylmethionine via methionine adenosyltransferase(Reference Kaul, Zadeh and Shah2). S-Adenosylhomocysteine, a product of this methyl-transferase reaction, is hydrolysed to Hcy in a reversible reaction via the S-adenosylhomocysteine hydrolases. Once synthesized, Hcy can be converted back to methionine in the remethylation pathway via 5-methyltetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) and methionine synthase (MTR) using cofactors such as vitamin B12 and folate(Reference Huang, Yuan and Zhang3). Hcy can also be condensed with serine to form cystathionine via vitamin B6-dependent cystathionine β-synthase in the transsulfuration pathway; subsequently, cystathionine is converted to cysteine, α-ketosuccinic acid, taurine and H2S via vitamin B6-dependent cystathionine γ-lyase(Reference Selhub4).
Elevated plasma Hcy concentration is generally considered an independent risk factor for various pathologies such as CVD, endothelial damage, venous thrombosis, atherosclerosis, abnormal collagen cross-linking, oxidative stress, osteoporotic fracture, preterm birth, neural-tube defects, pregnancy complications and several disorders of the central nervous system(Reference Kluijtmans, Young and Boreham5–Reference McCully and Wilson9), but the causes of high plasma Hcy are not fully understood. The aetiology of hyperhomocysteinaemia (HHcy) is considered to be multi-factorial, including dietary and lifestyle and genetic factors(Reference Refsum, Ueland and Nygard10). In the USA, two-thirds of cases with HHcy in an elderly population were associated with inadequate plasma/serum concentrations of one or more of the vitamin B group(Reference Selhub, Jacques and Rosenberg11). In addition, low intake of n-3 PUFA(Reference Huang, Wahlqvist and Li12–Reference Huang, Tucker and Lee14), smoking(Reference Husemoen, Thomsen and Fenger15, Reference Saw, Yuan and Ong16), drinking(Reference Vinukonda, Shaik Mohammad and Md Nurul Jain17, Reference Bleich, Bleich and Kropp18) and physical activity(Reference Chrysohoou, Panagiotakos and Pitsavos19) were also related to elevated plasma Hcy. The genetic causes of HHcy include rare inborn errors of Hcy metabolism, such as variants affecting cystathionine β-synthase and MTHFR(Reference Blom20–Reference DeVos, Chanson and Liu22). Genetic polymorphisms in folate metabolism genes have been reported to be associated with elevated Hcy levels(Reference DeVos, Chanson and Liu22, Reference Devlin, Clarke and Birks23). Of the genes involved in folate uptake and retention, that encoding folate hydrolase 1 (FOLH1), which hydrolyses dietary folate, has received the most attention with regard to its potential to modulate plasma folate status(Reference DeVos, Chanson and Liu22). Studies reported that the 1561C→T single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in FOLH1 was associated with elevated plasma folate concentrations(Reference Vargas-Martinez, Ordovas and Wilson24–Reference Winkelmayer, Eberle and Sunder-Plassmann26). Genetic variation in the proton-coupled folate transporter (PCFI), which was recently identified to absorb folate from the gut(Reference Qiu, Jansen and Sakaris27), may also be associated with plasma folate and Hcy concentrations. We previously also reported that methionine adenosyltransferase variants (MAT1A) affect plasma Hcy levels and CVD(Reference Lai, Parnell and Troen28).
Although numerous studies have investigated the relationship between lifestyle factors such as smoking, drinking and physical activity, and genetic variants involved in folate metabolism and plasma Hcy levels(Reference Saw, Yuan and Ong16), the results are inconsistent across different populations. Little is known about the combined effects of lifestyle factors and genetic polymorphisms on plasma Hcy in the general population. In the present study, we hypothesized that genetic variants in genes involved in the folate metabolic pathway modulate the effects of smoking, drinking and physical activity on plasma Hcy concentration. The goal of the present study was to examine the interactions between lifestyle factors and selected genetic variants in genes of the folate metabolic pathway in relationship to plasma Hcy in an adult population of Puerto Ricans.
Methods
Study design and subjects
The current study was conducted in the ongoing Boston Puerto Rican Health Study (BPRHS) as described previously(Reference Tucker, Mattei and Noel29). Briefly, areas of high Hispanic density in the Boston metropolitan area were identified from the year 2000 census, and one Puerto Rican adult from each household with at least one Puerto Rican person between 45 and 75 years of age was randomly selected for participation. Nine hundred and ninety-four participants with complete phenotypes and genotype data were included in the present study. Interviews were conducted in the home. In addition to health-related and anthropometric data, detailed dietary intake data were collected using a questionnaire previously adapted from the National Cancer Institute/Block food frequency form and validated for this population(Reference Tucker, Bianchi and Maras30). Fasting blood samples were collected the morning following the health interviews in the volunteer's home. Approval for the BPRHS was obtained from the Institutional Review Board of the Tufts Medical Center and Tufts University Health Sciences.
Genetic analysis
DNA was isolated from blood samples using QIAamp DNA Blood Mini kits according to the manufacturer's instructions (Qiagen, Valencia, CA, USA). Seven SNP of four methionine metabolism genes – MTHFR 1298A→C (rs1801131), MTHFR 677C→T (rs1801133), FOLH1 1561C→T (rs202712), FOLH1 (rs647370), MAT1A 3U150 (rs7087728), MAT1A_i15752 (rs4933327) and PCFT 928A→G (rs2239907) – chosen for genotyping are listed in Supplemental Table 1. These variants were genotyped using the TaqMan SNP genotyping system (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA)(Reference Lai, Parnell and Troen28). Based on our internal quality control and that estimated independently by external laboratories, the genotyping error rate was <1 %.
PLP, pyridoxal phosphate; Hcy, homocysteine.
Data are presented as mean and sd or n and %.
*Significantly different from men (P < 0·01).
Measurement of anthropometric and plasma biochemical parameters
Anthropometric data including height and weight were measured in duplicate consistent with the technique used by the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey(Reference Smith, Tucker and Yiannakouris31). BMI was calculated as weight in kilograms divided by the square of height in metres. Physical activity was estimated as physical activity score using the Paffenbarger questionnaire of the Harvard Alumni Activity Survey(Reference Lee and Paffenbarger32). The physical activity score is constructed by weighting time spent in various activities by factors that parallel increasing oxygen consumption rates associated with physical activity intensity(Reference Lai, Tucker and Parnell33). Fasting blood samples were collected by venepuncture from all participants. Total plasma Hcy was measured using HPLC with fluorescence detection as previously described(Reference Araki and Sako34). Plasma pyridoxal phosphate (PLP) was determined using the radio-enzymatic method of Camp et al.(Reference Camp, Chipponi and Faraj35). Plasma folate and vitamin B12 were measured using Immulite chemiluminescent kits according to the manufacturer's instructions (Diagnostic Products Corporation/Siemens, Los Angeles, CA, USA).
Dietary assessment
Dietary intake was assessed using an FFQ that was designed for and validated in this population(Reference Tucker, Bianchi and Maras30). Dietary data were linked to the Minnesota Nutrient Data System 1999, version 25 (University of Minnesota Nutrition Coordinating Center, Minneapolis, MN, USA) for nutrient analysis. Intakes of fatty acids were expressed as percentages of total energy intake.
Statistical analyses
The data analyses were performed using the SAS for Windows statistical software package version 9·1 (SAS Institute, Cary, NC, USA). All continuous variables were examined for normal distribution. Men and women were analysed together to ensure adequate statistical power. The χ 2 test was used to examine whether the genotype frequencies of the selected SNP were in Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium. Correlations between smoking status, plasma parameters and anthropometric measures were performed using ANOVA. Interactions between lifestyle factors and genotypes were tested in a general linear model while adjusting for potential confounders (age, sex, BMI, population admixture, drinking, energy intake, plasma folate, plasma vitamin B12 and plasma PLP, MTHFR 1298A→C, MTHFR 677C→T). The main effect of lifestyles as categorical or binary variables and genotypes as categorical variables were included in the model. All data are expressed as mean and standard deviation. Differences between groups were considered to be statistically significant at P ≤ 0·05.
Population admixture
For BPRHS participants, population admixture was estimated using principal component analysis(Reference Price, Patterson and Plenge36, Reference Lai, Tucker and Choudhry37). We estimated population admixture based on a panel of 100 SNP as informative ancestral markers that were genotyped in this population(Reference Lai, Tucker and Choudhry37). All analyses were adjusted for the estimated population admixture using the first major principal component with linear regression models(Reference Lai, Tucker and Choudhry37).
Results
Demographic, anthropometric and biochemical data in Boston Puerto Rican population
All seven SNP, where minor allele frequencies ranged from 0·05 to 0·42, were in Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium (χ 2 test; Supplemental Table 1). Plasma Hcy, plasma folate and BMI differed significantly between men and women (P < 0·01; Table 1). Plasma Hcy concentration for all subjects ranged from 3·9 to 30·4 μmol/l. Men had higher Hcy levels than women (P < 0·001; Table 1). In addition, plasma Hcy was positively correlated with age (P < 0·001).
Associations between lifestyle and plasma homocysteine
Plasma Hcy (P = 0·001), folate (P = 0·011) and vitamin B12 (P = 0·012) were significantly associated with smoking status. Current smokers had higher plasma Hcy (9·64 (sd 4·18) μmol/l), but lower plasma folate and PLP compared with non-smokers (Table 2). We did not observe significant associations between drinking status and plasma Hcy, folate, PLP and vitamin B12 when drinking status was compared across three groups (current drinkers, former drinkers and non-drinkers) or when current drinkers were compared with non-drinkers and former drinkers combined (Table 2). Physical activity was positively associated with plasma PLP (P = 0·001) and vitamin B12 (P = 0·041), but not with plasma Hcy (P = 0·068; Table 2).
Hcy, homocysteine; PLP, pyridoxal phosphate; PA, physical activity.
†Current smokers compared with former and never smokers combined.
‡Adjusted for age, sex, BMI, population admixture, drinking, energy intake, plasma folate, plasma vitamin B12 and plasma PLP, MTHFR 1298A→C and MTHFR 677C→T.
§Current drinkers compared with former and never drinkers combined.
||Adjusted for age, sex, BMI, population admixture, smoking, dietary energy, plasma folate, plasma vitamin B12 and plasma PLP, MTHFR 1298A→C and MTHFR 677C→T.
¶Adjusted for age, sex, BMI, population admixture, smoking, drinking, dietary energy, plasma folate, plasma vitamin B12 and plasma PLP, MTHFR 1298A→C and MTHFR 677C→T.
Interactions between smoking status and genetic variants on plasma homocysteine
Four polymorphisms (MTHFR 677C→T, FOLH1 1561C→T, FOLH1 rs647370, PCFT 928A→G) interacted significantly with smoking in determining plasma Hcy while adjusted for age, sex, drinking, BMI, plasma folate, PLP and vitamin B12, dietary energy and population admixture (P = 0·002 to 0·038; Table 3). In subjects with the genotype FOLH1 1561TT, plasma Hcy concentrations were significantly different among the three smoking statuses (P for trend = 0·011); subjects who were smokers had the highest plasma Hcy, while subjects who never smoked had the lowest plasma Hcy. However, in subjects with FOLH1 1561CT genotype, there was no significant difference in plasma Hcy levels among the three smoking statuses (P for trend = 0·631). For PCFT 928A→G, in GG subjects smoking significantly affected the plasma Hcy level (P for trend = 0·050), while we did not find any significant effect in subjects with PCFT 928AG or AA (P for trend = 0·795; Table 3).
MTHFR, 5-methyltetrahydrofolate reductase; FOLH1, folate hydrolase 1; PCFT, proton-coupled folate transporter.
†Adjusted for age, sex, BMI, population admixture, drinking, dietary energy, plasma folate, plasma vitamin B12 and plasma pyridoxal phosphate, MTHFR 1298A→C and MTHFR 677C→T. After adjusting for n-3 PUFA in the model, the results remained the same.
Interactions between drinking status and PCFT 928A→G on plasma homocysteine
PCFT 928A→G displayed significant interactions with drinking status for plasma Hcy (P = 0·002) after adjusting for age, sex, smoking, population admixture, dietary energy, dietary total fat, plasma folate, plasma vitamin B12 and plasma PLP. Further analysis showed that GG homozygotes had significantly higher plasma Hcy concentrations compared with homozygous (AA) and heterozygous (AG) subjects combined (P = 0·030) among non-drinkers. Among current drinkers, GG homozygotes had lower plasma Hcy concentrations when compared with homozygous (AA) and heterozygous (AG) subjects (Fig. 1).
Influence on plasma homocysteine of the interaction between physical activity and the MTR 2756A→G/smoking association
MTR 2756A→G significantly interacted with physical activity in influencing plasma Hcy level (P = 0·002). When the physical activity score was low (<40), there was no significant difference between MTR 2756AA and minor allele (AG+GG) carriers. Interestingly, minor allele carriers had significantly higher plasma Hcy than homozygous (AA) subjects (P = 0·034) when the physical activity score was ≥40 (Fig. 2). Smoking interacted significantly with physical activity to influence plasma Hcy level (P = 0·023; Fig. 3). When the physical activity score was low (<40), there was no significant difference between Hcy concentrations in smokers and non-smokers. However, when physical activity score was high (≥40), we observed that minor allele carriers (AG+GG) had significantly higher plasma Hcy than major allele homozygotes (AA; P = 0·012).
Discussion
In the present study conducted in the BPRHS, we demonstrated that lifestyle factors such as smoking were associated with elevated plasma Hcy concentration but that drinking and physical activity were not directly associated with plasma Hcy. Moreover, we observed that smoking, drinking and physical activity each interacted with genetic polymorphisms in genes involved in the methionine metabolic pathway in determining plasma Hcy levels.
Elevated plasma Hcy plays an important role in the pathology of CVD(Reference Huang, Yuan and Zhang3). HHcy is a complex, multi-factorial condition and its environmental and genetic contributors continue to be identified and refined. However, these factors often have been evaluated mainly independently of one another. In the present study, we examined previously unreported interactions between lifestyle and genetic variants in modulating plasma Hcy levels.
Plasma Hcy concentrations were significantly higher in men than in women, which is consistent with previous studies(Reference Saw, Yuan and Ong16, Reference Nygard, Vollset and Refsum38). This sex difference can be explained in part by folate intake, as the plasma folate concentrations in women were significantly higher than in men in this population. Other factors such as sex hormones may also contribute to gender-related differences in Hcy. Furthermore, plasma Hcy is higher in postmenopausal women compared with premenopausal women and is reduced in response to oestrogen replacement therapy(Reference Araki and Sako34, Reference Camp, Chipponi and Faraj35). All of these factors may contribute to the higher plasma Hcy concentrations observed in men compared to women.
In accordance with other studies in large populations(Reference Huang, Tucker and Lee14, Reference Price, Patterson and Plenge36) and a randomized control trial(Reference Stein, Bushara and Bushara39), we also observed that cigarette smoking was positively associated with plasma Hcy concentrations, while smoking was negatively associated with plasma folate and PLP. The mechanism for this relationship is not fully understood, but one possibility is smoking might reduce the availability of folate for the remethylation of Hcy to methionine(Reference De Bree, Verschuren and Kromhout40). Additional proposed mechanisms are smoking, which induces local effects in cells exposed to cigarette smoke, may influence the Hcy concentration by changing plasma thiol redox status, or could inhibit enzymes involved in the metabolism of Hcy(Reference De Bree, Verschuren and Kromhout40).
In the present study, we observed the same interaction between smoking status and MTHFR 677C→T as reported previously(Reference Huang, Tucker and Lee14). In addition, we identified previously unreported interactions between smoking and genetic polymorphisms (FOLH1 1561C→T, FOLH1 rs647370, PCFT 928A→G) for plasma Hcy. The suboptimal plasma folate status among smokers observed in our study might explain this interaction, because plasma folate has been shown to interact with MTHFR 677C→T(Reference Husemoen, Thomsen and Fenger15). Another study which reported that smoking interacted with dietary folate further supports this relationship(Reference de Bree, Verschuren and Blom41).
Moderate alcohol consumption in social drinkers increased plasma Hcy levels(Reference Bleich, Bleich and Kropp18). MTHFR 677T, MTRR 66A, GCPII 1561T and alcohol intake were also associated with higher plasma Hcy among South Indians(Reference Saw, Yuan and Ong16). However, we did not confirm these results in the present study. One possible explanation for this discrepancy is genetic variants involved in folate metabolism may modify the effect of drinking on plasma Hcy and folate levels. Therefore, to evaluate our hypothesis, we examined the interactions of drinking and critical genes involved in folate metabolism on plasma Hcy. Interestingly, we observed that PCFT 928A→G interacts significantly with drinking status for plasma Hcy, which suggests that the effect of drinking on plasma Hcy depended on PCFT genotype, and may account for the inconsistencies with previous studies. Studies also suggested that higher plasma Hcy concentrations in consumers of large quantities of alcohol may be related to trapping of 5-methyltetrahydrofolate by alcohol and impaired remethylation associated with genetic polymorphisms(Reference Vinukonda, Shaik Mohammad and Md Nurul Jain17) or to ethanol-induced B vitamin depletion(Reference De Bree, Verschuren and Kromhout40) and interference of alcohol with intestinal absorption of folate(Reference Halsted, Villanueva and Devlin42). Therefore, these results suggest that the effect of drinking on plasma Hcy depends on folate metabolism-related gene polymorphisms.
Despite the inconsistent results of effects of physical activity on plasma Hcy levels, several studies have reported beneficial effects on Hcy in response to exercise. Plasma Hcy level is inversely related to level of physical activity, especially in older subjects(Reference Nygard, Vollset and Refsum38). In contrast, other studies reported that physical exercise does not reduce plasma Hcy levels or may even be associated with higher concentrations(Reference Sotgia, Carru and Caria43). In the present study we also observed that physical activity was not associated with plasma Hcy. Therefore, questions about the nature of the relationship between Hcy and physical activity remain unanswered(Reference Sotgia, Carru and Caria43). However, these inconsistencies reported in previous studies can be explained by our present results which identified a previously unreported interaction between MTR 2756A→G and physical activity on Hcy. This result suggests that not all subjects in a population have the same response to physical activity, as the effect of physical activity on plasma Hcy depends on MTR genotype. Additionally, it has been shown that the thermolabile variant of MTHFR 677C→T (rs1801133, a regulating enzyme in Hcy metabolism) modified the relationship between several lifestyle factors and Hcy(Reference Jacques, Kalmbach and Bagley44). Thus, the effect of the changes in lifestyle-related factors on Hcy may depend on MTHFR C677T genotype(Reference Husemoen, Linneberg and Fenger45). Better understanding of the complex relationships between lifestyle and Hcy will require additional studies focusing on the interaction between physical activity and genetic polymorphisms involved in folate metabolic pathways. The biological mechanism through which physical activity lowers plasma Hcy levels remains to be determined.
In summary, the present study reinforces earlier evidence demonstrating that lifestyle factors are important modifiers of plasma Hcy concentration. In addition, our work extends this knowledge to demonstrate that genetic polymorphisms in genes whose proteins function in the methionine metabolic pathway further modulate the effects of lifestyle factors which influence plasma Hcy. It is essential to determine whether changes in these lifestyle factors reinforce effects in the context of interaction with genetic variation on Hcy metabolism and to clarify the potential mechanism(s) by which this can take place.
Acknowledgements
The current work was supported by the China Scholarship Council; the National Institutes of Health/National Institute on Aging (grant number 5P01AG023394-02); the National Institutes of Health/National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (grant numbers HL54776 and HL078885); contracts 53-K06-5-10 and 58-1950-9-001 from the US Department of Agriculture Research Service; and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (grant number 30972464). The authors report no conflict of interest. T.H. and Y.-C.L. carried out the studies, analysed data and drafted the manuscript; C.-Q.L., L.D.P., Y.-C.L., C.E.S., J.S. and J.W.C. participated in manuscript preparation; and C.-Q.L., K.L.T., D.L. and J.M.O. participated in the project design. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.