Methylation-eQTL Analysis in Cancer Research

Author:

Liu Yusha1,Baggerly Keith A2,Orouji Elias3,Manyam Ganiraju2,Chen Huiqin2,Lam Michael4,Davis Jennifer S5,Lee Michael S6,Broom Bradley M2,Menter David G4,Rai Kunal3,Kopetz Scott4,Morris Jeffrey S7

Affiliation:

1. Department of Human Genetics, The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637, USA

2. Department of Bioinformatics and Computational Biology, M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX 77030, USA

3. Department of Genomic Medicine, M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX 77030, USA

4. Department of Gastrointestinal Medical Oncology, M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX 77030, USA

5. Department of Epidemiology, M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX 77030, USA

6. Department of Medicine, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA

7. Department of Biostatistics, Epidemiology and Informatics, The University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6021, USA

Abstract

Abstract Motivation DNA methylation is a key epigenetic factor regulating gene expression. While promoter methylation has been well studied, recent publications have revealed that functionally important methylation also occurs in intergenic and distal regions, and varies across genes and tissue types. Given the growing importance of inter-platform integrative genomic analyses, there is an urgent need to develop methods to discover and characterize gene-level relationships between methylation and expression. Results We introduce a novel sequential penalized regression approach to identify methylation-expression quantitative trait loci (methyl-eQTLs), a term that we have coined to represent, for each gene and tissue type, a sparse set of CpG loci best explaining gene expression and accompanying weights indicating direction and strength of association. Using TCGA and MD Anderson colorectal cohorts to build and validate our models, we demonstrate our strategy better explains expression variability than current commonly used gene-level methylation summaries. The methyl-eQTLs identified by our approach can be used to construct gene-level methylation summaries that are maximally correlated with gene expression for use in integrative models, and produce a tissue-specific summary of which genes appear to be strongly regulated by methylation. Our results introduce an important resource to the biomedical community for integrative genomics analyses involving DNA methylation. Availability and implementation We produce an R Shiny app (https://rstudio-prd-c1.pmacs.upenn.edu/methyl-eQTL/) that interactively presents methyl-eQTL results for colorectal, breast, and pancreatic cancer. The source R code for this work is provided in the supplement. Supplementary information Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Computational Mathematics,Computational Theory and Mathematics,Computer Science Applications,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry,Statistics and Probability

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