| Literature DB >> 25229548 |
Thomas Mikeska1, Jeffrey M Craig2.
Abstract
Biomarkers are naturally-occurring characteristics by which a particular pathological process or disease can be identified or monitored. They can reflect past environmental exposures, predict disease onset or course, or determine a patient's response to therapy. Epigenetic changes are such characteristics, with most epigenetic biomarkers discovered to date based on the epigenetic mark of DNA methylation. Many tissue types are suitable for the discovery of DNA methylation biomarkers including cell-based samples such as blood and tumor material and cell-free DNA samples such as plasma. DNA methylation biomarkers with diagnostic, prognostic and predictive power are already in clinical trials or in a clinical setting for cancer. Outside cancer, strong evidence that complex disease originates in early life is opening up exciting new avenues for the detection of DNA methylation biomarkers for adverse early life environment and for estimation of future disease risk. However, there are a number of limitations to overcome before such biomarkers reach the clinic. Nevertheless, DNA methylation biomarkers have great potential to contribute to personalized medicine throughout life. We review the current state of play for DNA methylation biomarkers, discuss the barriers that must be crossed on the way to implementation in a clinical setting, and predict their future use for human disease.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25229548 PMCID: PMC4198933 DOI: 10.3390/genes5030821
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096
Figure 1Illustration of the variety of tissues that can be used to investigate DNA methylation biomarkers. Note that tumor tissue is not listed individually as a cancer can affect any part of the body.
Nomenclature used in this review for the stages of DNA methylation biomarker development.
| Nomenclature | Description |
|---|---|
| Potential biomarker | Results of a single study |
| Validated biomarker | Same finding using an independent method |
| Replicated biomarker | Same finding in independent cohort(s) |
| Candidate clinical biomarker | Replicated in multiple cohorts and subjected to systematic review and meta-analysis; most likely undergoing clinical trials |
| Proven clinical biomarker | Used in clinical practice |
Commercially-available DNA methylation test kits for cancer. References are either systematic reviews/meta-analyses 1 or a set of corroborating references 2. This table is an updated version of that shown in [127].
| Gene(s) | Type of Biomarker | Type of Cancer | Diagnostic Test Kit: Brand Name (Manufacturer) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| diagnostic | Colorectal | Cologuard (Exact Sciences) | [ | |
| diagnostic | Colorectal | Epi proColon (Epigenomics) | [ | |
| diagnostic | Lung | Epi prolong (Epigenomics) | [ | |
| diagnostic | Prostate | ConfirmMDx (MDx Health) | [ | |
| predictive | Glioblastoma | PredictMDx Glioblastoma (MDx Health) | [ |
Summary of findings for the relationship between smoking and DNA methylation within the AHRR gene. Data refer to AHRR HM450 probe cg05575921 unless otherwise stated. Summary includes details of assay platform, age of subjects, details of exposure, tissues examined, number of subjects, whether AHRR expression was also measured, whether findings were validated or replicated and effect size (methylation levels in smokers compared to non-smokers).
| Reference | Platform | Age, Median | Exposure | Tissue | N | Effects Elsewhere in AHRR | Vali-dation | Repli-cation | Effect Size | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | HM450 | Adults, 45 | Current smoking | LCLs & alveolar MP | 119/19 1 | yes | Yes 2 | No | No | −15%/NS | |
| [ | HM450 | Birth | Maternal smoking 3 | Whole CB | 1062/36 4 | Yes | No | No | Yes 4 | −7.5%/−7.7% 4 | Multiple hits in the aryl hydrocarbon signaling pathway. Authors have since shown that effects are specific for maternal smoking through at least gestational week 18 [ |
| [ | HM450 | Adults, 49 | Current smoking | PBMC | 111 | Yes | No | Yes | No | −15% | African Americans |
| [ | HM450 | Adults, 48 | Current smoking | Whole PB | 81/84 5 | No | No | No | Yes 6 | −22% | Former smokers same as never smokers; changed only slightly after adjusting for cell composition |
| [ | HM450 | Adults, 22 | Current serum cotinine | PBMC | 107 | yes | No | No | No | −20% 7 | |
| [ | HM450 | Adults, 51/55/49/? 8 | Current smoking | Whole PB, lung tissue | 184/190/180/27 | yes | Yes 9 | Yes | Yes | −17%/−14%/NS/NS 10 | Replicated in a mouse model of smoking exposure |
| [ | HM450 | Adults, 60/53 11 | Current smoking | Whole PB | 749/232 11 | yes | No | Yes | Yes 11 | −24/−23% 11 | methylation-specific protein binding patterns were observed for cg05575921; levels in former smokers revert to levels similar to never smokers over time |
| [ | HM450 | Birth | Maternal smoking | Whole CB | 889 | yes | No | No | Yes | −4% | Replicated a previous study [ |
| [ | HM450 | Adults, 43 | Current smoking | Whole PB | 432 | yes | No 13 | No | Yes | −7.4% | Replicated a previous study [ |
| [ | HM450 | Female adults, 57 | Current smoking | Whole PB | 200 | No | No | No | Yes | −8% | Former and never smokers had similar methylation levels |
| [ | Sequenom EpiTyper | Birth & 18 months | Maternal smoking | CBMC, buccal epithelium, placenta | 46/15/24 12 | yes | Yes 14 | n/a | Y | −10%/NS/NS 12 | No effect if mother smoked early pregnancy only; effects of smoking stable to 18 months of age |
1 refers to the two different cell types tested; 2 AHRR expression in alveolar macrophages was inversely correlated with methylation of probe cg05575921; 3 measured using plasma cotinine at gestational week 18; 4 replicated using data from maternal smoking in pregnancy in an independent cohort; 5 data on Europeans replicated in South East Asians; 6 replicated across two ethnic groups; 7 effect size calculated from the regression line, highest to lowest plasma cotinine; 8 discovery, replication and validation groups are subsets of the same cohort and were analyzed along with lung tissue samples from a separate cohort; 9 AHRR expression in lung tissue was inversely correlated with methylation of probe cg05575921; 10 no difference with probe cg05575921, differences found for AHRR probes cg21161138 and cg23576855 (magnitudes similar to those seen in blood); 11 discovery and replication subsets of the same cohort; 12 significant associations between methylation and expression seen at six genes other than AHRR; 13 CBMC/buccal epithelium/placenta; 14 AHRR expression non-significantly higher in CBMCs in newborns exposed to smoking in pregnancy than those not exposed. Abbreviations: LCL, lymphoblastoid cell lines; MP, macrophages; PB, peripheral blood; CB, cord blood; MC, mononuclear cells; NS, not significant.
Other HM450 probes with significant correlations with smoking in at least four studies. Probes are included if found to be significantly associated with smoking in at least four independent studies. DHS, DNAse hypersensitive site, indicative of regulatory potential.
| Probe | Gene | References |
|---|---|---|
| cg03991871 | [ | |
| cg21161138 | [ | |
| cg03636183 | [ | |
| cg09935388 | [ | |
| cg22132788 | [ | |
| cg12803068 | [ | |
| cg21566642 | Intergenic (CpG island, DHS) | [ |
| cg06126421 | Intergenic (enhancer, DHS) | [ |