| Literature DB >> 24205506 |
Guillermo Barturen1, Stefanie Geisen, Francisco Dios, E J Maarten Hamberg, Michael Hackenberg, José L Oliver.
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 developed CpGislandEVO. 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 from OrthoDB, 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 resulting CpGislandEVO database, linking together CGIs and single-cytosine DNA methylation data from several mammalian species, is freely available at our website.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24205506 PMCID: PMC3800598 DOI: 10.1155/2013/709042
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Promoter region of the human gene KDM1A showing CGIs and methylation data for PBMC cells. The lifted homologous CGIs from six other species are shown for comparison. The small methylated human CGI is conserved in three primate species, while the larger unmethylated human CGI is not only conserved in some primates but also in the mouse.
Figure 2Comparison of the promoter region of the gene KDM1A in human and rhesus monkey using two frames within the same window. The unmethylated CGI is conserved between the two species, while the small human differentially methylated CGI is missing in the rhesus monkey.
(a) Query gene
| Species | Gene name | Link Ensembl | Link UCSC | Link JBrowseViewer |
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| KDM1A |
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(b) Orthologous genes
| Species | Gene name ( | Link Ensembl | Link UCSC | Link JBrowseViewer |
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| KDM1A (ENSGGOG00000003664) |
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| KDM1A (ENSMMUG00000009773) |
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| Kdm1a (ENSMUSG00000036940) |
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| KDM1A (ENSPTRG00000000321) |
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| KDM1A (ENSPPYG00000001747) |
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| Kdm1 (ENSRNOG00000022372) |
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