Comethyl: a network-based methylome approach to investigate the multivariate nature of health and disease

Author:

Mordaunt Charles E1ORCID,Mouat Julia S1,Schmidt Rebecca J2ORCID,LaSalle Janine M1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, Genome Center, Perinatal Origins of Disparities Center, and MIND Institute, University of California, Davis, CA, USA

2. Department of Public Health Sciences, Perinatal Origins of Disparities Center, and MIND Institute, University of California, Davis, CA, USA

Abstract

Abstract Health outcomes are frequently shaped by difficult to dissect inter-relationships between biological, behavioral, social and environmental factors. DNA methylation patterns reflect such multivariate intersections, providing a rich source of novel biomarkers and insight into disease etiologies. Recent advances in whole-genome bisulfite sequencing enable investigation of DNA methylation over all genomic CpGs, but existing bioinformatic approaches lack accessible system-level tools. Here, we develop the R package Comethyl, for weighted gene correlation network analysis of user-defined genomic regions that generates modules of comethylated regions, which are then tested for correlations with multivariate sample traits. First, regions are defined by CpG genomic location or regulatory annotation and filtered based on CpG count, sequencing depth and variability. Next, correlation networks are used to find modules of interconnected nodes using methylation values within the selected regions. Each module containing multiple comethylated regions is reduced in complexity to a single eigennode value, which is then tested for correlations with experimental metadata. Comethyl has the ability to cover the noncoding regulatory regions of the genome with high relevance to interpretation of genome-wide association studies and integration with other types of epigenomic data. We demonstrate the utility of Comethyl on a dataset of male cord blood samples from newborns later diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) versus typical development. Comethyl successfully identified an ASD-associated module containing regions mapped to genes enriched for brain glial functions. Comethyl is expected to be useful in uncovering the multivariate nature of health disparities for a variety of common disorders. Comethyl is available at github.com/cemordaunt/comethyl with complete documentation and example analyses.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Molecular Biology,Information Systems

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