CpGislandEVO: A Database and Genome Browser for Comparative Evolutionary Genomics of CpG Islands

Author:

Barturen Guillermo12,Geisen Stefanie12ORCID,Dios Francisco12,Hamberg E. J. Maarten12,Hackenberg Michael12ORCID,Oliver José L.12

Affiliation:

1. Departamento de Genética, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Granada, 18071 Granada, Spain

2. Laboratório de Bioinformática, Instituto de Biotecnología, Centro de Investigación Biomédica, 18100 Granada, Spain

Abstract

Hypomethylated, CpG-rich DNA segments (CpG islands, CGIs) are epigenome markers involved in key biological processes. Aberrant methylation is implicated in the appearance of several disorders as cancer, immunodeficiency, or centromere instability. Furthermore, methylation differences at promoter regions between human and chimpanzee strongly associate with genes involved in neurological/psychological disorders and cancers. Therefore, the evolutionary comparative analyses of CGIs can provide insights on the functional role of these epigenome markers in both health and disease. Given the lack of specific tools, we developedCpGislandEVO. Briefly, we first compile a database of statistically significant CGIs for the best assembled mammalian genome sequences available to date. Second, by means of a coupled browser front-end, we focus on the CGIs overlapping orthologous genes extracted fromOrthoDB, thus ensuring the comparison between CGIs located on truly homologous genome segments. This allows comparing the main compositional features between homologous CGIs. Finally, to facilitate nucleotide comparisons, we lifted genome coordinates between assemblies from different species, which enables the analysis of sequence divergence by direct count of nucleotide substitutions and indels occurring between homologous CGIs. The resultingCpGislandEVOdatabase, linking together CGIs and single-cytosine DNA methylation data from several mammalian species, is freely available at our website.

Funder

Spanish Government

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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