An Analysis of Methylome Evolution in Primates

Author:

Sahm Arne1ORCID,Koch Philipp2,Horvath Steve3,Hoffmann Steve1

Affiliation:

1. Computational Biology Group, Leibniz Institute on Aging—Fritz Lipmann Institute, Jena, Germany

2. Core Facility Life Science Computing, Leibniz Institute on Aging—Fritz Lipmann Institute, Jena, Germany

3. Department of Human Genetics, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA

Abstract

Abstract Although the investigation of the epigenome becomes increasingly important, still little is known about the long-term evolution of epigenetic marks and systematic investigation strategies are still lacking. Here, we systematically demonstrate the transfer of classic phylogenetic methods such as maximum likelihood based on substitution models, parsimony, and distance-based to interval-scaled epigenetic data. Using a great apes blood data set, we demonstrate that DNA methylation is evolutionarily conserved at the level of individual CpGs in promotors, enhancers, and genic regions. Our analysis also reveals that this epigenomic conservation is significantly correlated with its transcription factor binding density. Binding sites for transcription factors involved in neuron differentiation and components of AP-1 evolve at a significantly higher rate at methylation than at the nucleotide level. Moreover, our models suggest an accelerated epigenomic evolution at binding sites of BRCA1, chromobox homolog protein 2, and factors of the polycomb repressor 2 complex in humans. For most genomic regions, the methylation-based reconstruction of phylogenetic trees is at par with sequence-based reconstruction. Most strikingly, phylogenetic reconstruction using methylation rates in enhancer regions was ineffective independently of the chosen model. We identify a set of phylogenetically uninformative CpG sites enriched in enhancers controlling immune-related genes.

Funder

German Federal Ministry of Education and Research

Joachim Herz Foundation

German Research Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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