| Literature DB >> 25490447 |
Dan A Landau1, Kendell Clement2, Michael J Ziller3, Patrick Boyle4, Jean Fan5, Hongcang Gu4, Kristen Stevenson6, Carrie Sougnez4, Lili Wang7, Shuqiang Li8, Dylan Kotliar9, Wandi Zhang9, Mahmoud Ghandi4, Levi Garraway10, Stacey M Fernandes11, Kenneth J Livak8, Stacey Gabriel4, Andreas Gnirke4, Eric S Lander4, Jennifer R Brown12, Donna Neuberg6, Peter V Kharchenko13, Nir Hacohen14, Gad Getz15, Alexander Meissner16, Catherine J Wu17.
Abstract
Intratumoral heterogeneity plays a critical role in tumor evolution. To define the contribution of DNA methylation to heterogeneity within tumors, we performed genome-scale bisulfite sequencing of 104 primary chronic lymphocytic leukemias (CLLs). Compared with 26 normal B cell samples, CLLs consistently displayed higher intrasample variability of DNA methylation patterns across the genome, which appears to arise from stochastically disordered methylation in malignant cells. Transcriptome analysis of bulk and single CLL cells revealed that methylation disorder was linked to low-level expression. Disordered methylation was further associated with adverse clinical outcome. We therefore propose that disordered methylation plays a similar role to that of genetic instability, enhancing the ability of cancer cells to search for superior evolutionary trajectories.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25490447 PMCID: PMC4302418 DOI: 10.1016/j.ccell.2014.10.012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Cell ISSN: 1535-6108 Impact factor: 31.743