A DNA methylation fingerprint of 1628 human samples

Author:

Fernandez Agustin F.,Assenov Yassen,Martin-Subero Jose Ignacio,Balint Balazs,Siebert Reiner,Taniguchi Hiroaki,Yamamoto Hiroyuki,Hidalgo Manuel,Tan Aik-Choon,Galm Oliver,Ferrer Isidre,Sanchez-Cespedes Montse,Villanueva Alberto,Carmona Javier,Sanchez-Mut Jose V.,Berdasco Maria,Moreno Victor,Capella Gabriel,Monk David,Ballestar Esteban,Ropero Santiago,Martinez Ramon,Sanchez-Carbayo Marta,Prosper Felipe,Agirre Xabier,Fraga Mario F.,Graña Osvaldo,Perez-Jurado Luis,Mora Jaume,Puig Susana,Prat Jaime,Badimon Lina,Puca Annibale A.,Meltzer Stephen J.,Lengauer Thomas,Bridgewater John,Bock Christoph,Esteller Manel

Abstract

Most of the studies characterizing DNA methylation patterns have been restricted to particular genomic loci in a limited number of human samples and pathological conditions. Herein, we present a compromise between an extremely comprehensive study of a human sample population with an intermediate level of resolution of CpGs at the genomic level. We obtained a DNA methylation fingerprint of 1628 human samples in which we interrogated 1505 CpG sites. The DNA methylation patterns revealed show this epigenetic mark to be critical in tissue-type definition and stemness, particularly around transcription start sites that are not within a CpG island. For disease, the generated DNA methylation fingerprints show that, during tumorigenesis, human cancer cells underwent a progressive gain of promoter CpG-island hypermethylation and a loss of CpG methylation in non-CpG-island promoters. Although transformed cells are those in which DNA methylation disruption is more obvious, we observed that other common human diseases, such as neurological and autoimmune disorders, had their own distinct DNA methylation profiles. Most importantly, we provide proof of principle that the DNA methylation fingerprints obtained might be useful for translational purposes by showing that we are able to identify the tumor type origin of cancers of unknown primary origin (CUPs). Thus, the DNA methylation patterns identified across the largest spectrum of samples, tissues, and diseases reported to date constitute a baseline for developing higher-resolution DNA methylation maps and provide important clues concerning the contribution of CpG methylation to tissue identity and its changes in the most prevalent human diseases.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics

Reference83 articles.

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