Mapping of Variable DNA Methylation Across Multiple Cell Types Defines a Dynamic Regulatory Landscape of the Human Genome

Author:

Gu Junchen1,Stevens Michael12,Xing Xiaoyun1,Li Daofeng1,Zhang Bo3,Payton Jacqueline E4,Oltz Eugene M4,Jarvis James N5,Jiang Kaiyu5,Cicero Theodore6,Costello Joseph F7,Wang Ting112

Affiliation:

1. Department of Genetics, Center for Genome Sciences and Systems Biology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63108

2. Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri 63130

3. Department of Developmental Biology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63108

4. Department of Pathology and Immunology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110

5. Department of Pediatrics, University of Buffalo, New York 14203

6. Department of Psychiatry, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110

7. Brain Tumor Research Center, Department of Neurosurgery, Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of California, San Francisco, California 94143

Abstract

Abstract DNA methylation is an important epigenetic modification involved in many biological processes and diseases. Many studies have mapped DNA methylation changes associated with embryogenesis, cell differentiation, and cancer at a genome-wide scale. Our understanding of genome-wide DNA methylation changes in a developmental or disease-related context has been steadily growing. However, the investigation of which CpGs are variably methylated in different normal cell or tissue types is still limited. Here, we present an in-depth analysis of 54 single-CpG-resolution DNA methylomes of normal human cell types by integrating high-throughput sequencing-based methylation data. We found that the ratio of methylated to unmethylated CpGs is relatively constant regardless of cell type. However, which CpGs made up the unmethylated complement was cell-type specific. We categorized the 26,000,000 human autosomal CpGs based on their methylation levels across multiple cell types to identify variably methylated CpGs and found that 22.6% exhibited variable DNA methylation. These variably methylated CpGs formed 660,000 variably methylated regions (VMRs), encompassing 11% of the genome. By integrating a multitude of genomic data, we found that VMRs enrich for histone modifications indicative of enhancers, suggesting their role as regulatory elements marking cell type specificity. VMRs enriched for transcription factor binding sites in a tissue-dependent manner. Importantly, they enriched for GWAS variants, suggesting that VMRs could potentially be implicated in disease and complex traits. Taken together, our results highlight the link between CpG methylation variation, genetic variation, and disease risk for many human cell types.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics(clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology

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