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Genome-wide meQTL mapping in cattle blood reveals cis and trans regulation of DNA methylation

Created on 09 Jul 2026

Authors

Fouere, C., Costes, V., Besnard, F., Le Danvic, C., Patry, C., Fritz, S., Boussaha, M., Jouin, M., Boichard, D., Kiefer, H., Costa Monteiro Moreira, G., Sanchez, M.-P.

Abstract

Background Complex traits are influenced by numerous variants, most of which have regulatory effects on gene expression that can be mediated by DNA methylation. Molecular QTL mapping is an approach that aims to dissect these effects. However, obtaining molecular phenotypes on a large scale is challenging, particularly in livestock species. In cattle, an epigenotyping array called EpiChip has recently been developed in the European RUMIGEN project. The EpiChip, which contains 43,317 CpG sites distributed all over the bovine genome, enables large-scale measurement of DNA methylation. This study aims to characterize the genetic determinism of blood DNA methylation in cows by estimating heritability and mapping cis- and trans-methylation QTLs (meQTLs). Results Whole blood samples from 4,457 genotyped Holstein cows were epigenotyped. Across all CpG sites, the heritability estimates averaged 24.6%. The local meQTL mapping at sequence-level for variable CpG sites (SD > 2.5%; n = 28,806) detected cis-meQTLs for 80.1% of the CpG sites, with sentinel SNPs located close to their associated CpGs. A two-step analysis was also conducted to identify long-range associations, with a particular focus on trans-meQTL hotspots. First, we identified CpG-SNP trans-associations using medium-density genotypes (50k SNPs) that revealed 31,846 SNPs with significant effects on 1 to 530 trans-CpG sites. Then, regions associated with at least 34 independent trans-CpGs were retained defining 31 hotpots. For each hotspot, a local sequence-level GWAS was conducted using the first principal component derived from the associated trans-CpGs. Out of the 31 detected hotspots, three were located close to transcription factor genes (RUNX1, NFIC and FOXA3) for which the associated trans-CpGs were enriched for the corresponding binding motif. Two other hotspots were located within KDM5A and KDM5B, and their corresponding trans-CpGs were strongly overrepresented in H3K4me3 narrow peaks in blood as well as in other tissues. Conclusions By identifying functional candidate genes associated with blood DNA methylation in cattle, these findings provide new insights into the regulatory architecture of DNA methylation in mammals, highlighting the value of large-scale molecular data from livestock populations.

Preprint server: bioRxiv
The authors list and abstract were imported from bioRxiv on 09 Jul 2026.

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