| Literature DB >> 24847876 |
Volker Hovestadt1, David T W Jones2, Simone Picelli3, Wei Wang3, Marcel Kool4, Paul A Northcott4, Marc Sultan5, Katharina Stachurski6, Marina Ryzhova7, Hans-Jörg Warnatz5, Meryem Ralser5, Sonja Brun8, Jens Bunt9, Natalie Jäger10, Kortine Kleinheinz11, Serap Erkek12, Ursula D Weber3, Cynthia C Bartholomae13, Christof von Kalle13, Chris Lawerenz14, Jürgen Eils14, Jan Koster15, Rogier Versteeg15, Till Milde16, Olaf Witt16, Sabine Schmidt17, Stephan Wolf17, Torsten Pietsch18, Stefan Rutkowski19, Wolfram Scheurlen20, Michael D Taylor21, Benedikt Brors10, Jörg Felsberg22, Guido Reifenberger22, Arndt Borkhardt6, Hans Lehrach5, Robert J Wechsler-Reya8, Roland Eils23, Marie-Laure Yaspo5, Pablo Landgraf6, Andrey Korshunov24, Marc Zapatka3, Bernhard Radlwimmer3, Stefan M Pfister25, Peter Lichter26.
Abstract
Epigenetic alterations, that is, disruption of DNA methylation and chromatin architecture, are now acknowledged as a universal feature of tumorigenesis. Medulloblastoma, a clinically challenging, malignant childhood brain tumour, is no exception. Despite much progress from recent genomics studies, with recurrent changes identified in each of the four distinct tumour subgroups (WNT-pathway-activated, SHH-pathway-activated, and the less-well-characterized Group 3 and Group 4), many cases still lack an obvious genetic driver. Here we present whole-genome bisulphite-sequencing data from thirty-four human and five murine tumours plus eight human and three murine normal controls, augmented with matched whole-genome, RNA and chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing data. This comprehensive data set allowed us to decipher several features underlying the interplay between the genome, epigenome and transcriptome, and its effects on medulloblastoma pathophysiology. Most notable were highly prevalent regions of hypomethylation correlating with increased gene expression, extending tens of kilobases downstream of transcription start sites. Focal regions of low methylation linked to transcription-factor-binding sites shed light on differential transcriptional networks between subgroups, whereas increased methylation due to re-normalization of repressed chromatin in DNA methylation valleys was positively correlated with gene expression. Large, partially methylated domains affecting up to one-third of the genome showed increased mutation rates and gene silencing in a subgroup-specific fashion. Epigenetic alterations also affected novel medulloblastoma candidate genes (for example, LIN28B), resulting in alternative promoter usage and/or differential messenger RNA/microRNA expression. Analysis of mouse medulloblastoma and precursor-cell methylation demonstrated a somatic origin for many alterations. Our data provide insights into the epigenetic regulation of transcription and genome organization in medulloblastoma pathogenesis, which are probably also of importance in a wider developmental and disease context.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24847876 DOI: 10.1038/nature13268
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962