| Literature DB >> 26976580 |
Roni Lehmann-Werman1, Daniel Neiman1, Hai Zemmour1, Joshua Moss1, Judith Magenheim1, Adi Vaknin-Dembinsky2, Sten Rubertsson3, Bengt Nellgård4, Kaj Blennow5, Henrik Zetterberg6, Kirsty Spalding7, Michael J Haller8, Clive H Wasserfall8, Desmond A Schatz8, Carla J Greenbaum9, Craig Dorrell10, Markus Grompe10, Aviad Zick11, Ayala Hubert11, Myriam Maoz11, Volker Fendrich12, Detlef K Bartsch12, Talia Golan13, Shmuel A Ben Sasson1, Gideon Zamir14, Aharon Razin1, Howard Cedar1, A M James Shapiro15, Benjamin Glaser16, Ruth Shemer17, Yuval Dor17.
Abstract
Minimally invasive detection of cell death could prove an invaluable resource in many physiologic and pathologic situations. Cell-free circulating DNA (cfDNA) released from dying cells is emerging as a diagnostic tool for monitoring cancer dynamics and graft failure. However, existing methods rely on differences in DNA sequences in source tissues, so that cell death cannot be identified in tissues with a normal genome. We developed a method of detecting tissue-specific cell death in humans based on tissue-specific methylation patterns in cfDNA. We interrogated tissue-specific methylome databases to identify cell type-specific DNA methylation signatures and developed a method to detect these signatures in mixed DNA samples. We isolated cfDNA from plasma or serum of donors, treated the cfDNA with bisulfite, PCR-amplified the cfDNA, and sequenced it to quantify cfDNA carrying the methylation markers of the cell type of interest. Pancreatic β-cell DNA was identified in the circulation of patients with recently diagnosed type-1 diabetes and islet-graft recipients; oligodendrocyte DNA was identified in patients with relapsing multiple sclerosis; neuronal/glial DNA was identified in patients after traumatic brain injury or cardiac arrest; and exocrine pancreas DNA was identified in patients with pancreatic cancer or pancreatitis. This proof-of-concept study demonstrates that the tissue origins of cfDNA and thus the rate of death of specific cell types can be determined in humans. The approach can be adapted to identify cfDNA derived from any cell type in the body, offering a minimally invasive window for diagnosing and monitoring a broad spectrum of human pathologies as well as providing a better understanding of normal tissue dynamics.Entities:
Keywords: circulating DNA; diagnosis; methylation
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26976580 PMCID: PMC4822610 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1519286113
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205