| Literature DB >> 28392841 |
Ida L M Candiloro1,2,3, Thomas Mikeska3,4, Alexander Dobrovic2,3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Determining the role of DNA methylation in various biological processes is dependent on the accurate representation of often highly complex patterns. Accurate representation is dependent on unbiased PCR amplification post bisulfite modification, regardless of methylation status of any given epiallele. This is highly dependent on primer design. Particular difficulties are raised by the analysis of CpG-rich regions, which are the usual regions of interest. Here, it is often difficult or impossible to avoid placing primers in CpG-free regions, particularly if one wants to target a specific part of a CpG-rich region. This can cause biased amplification of methylated sequences if the C is placed at those positions or to unmethylated sequences if a T is placed at those positions.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28392841 PMCID: PMC5379501 DOI: 10.1186/s13148-017-0328-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Epigenetics ISSN: 1868-7075 Impact factor: 6.551
Fig. 1PCR primers for CDKN2B and DAPK1. a CpG dinucleotides are shown in red, and the position matching the cytosine in the dinucleotide is underlined (C in forward primers and G in reverse). Blue thymines (forward primers) and adenines (reverse primers) match cytosines in the DNA sequence that are not part of CpG dinucleotides and therefore undergo bisulfite modification. b Each of the six primer types tested are shown. The letters in red indicate the substitution in the forward primer using IUPAC nomenclature. The flanking Ns denote the flanking sequence. For the mismatch primer (with a mismatched base), the base was arbitrarily chosen as an A in the forward primer (and a T in the reverse primer). In the primer with the abasic site, there is no base attached to the deoxyribose while the regular DNA backbone is intact
Fig. 2Effect of substitutions and temperature on bias for homogeneously methylated templates. The rows represent the different substitutions at the variable sites. C primers matched the methylated template sequence (C in the forward primer, G in the reverse), I primers had inosines, Y primers had a C/T degeneracy (A/G in the reverse), N primers had totally degenerate bases (A/T/C/G), mm primers had mismatches (A in the forward primer and T in the reverse primer) and ab primers had abasic sites. The columns represent the annealing temperatures tested. For each assay, the average methylation percentage as measured at each CpG by bisulfite pyrosequencing across the amplicon is shown. The final CpG in both assays was not used in the calculations of the average methylation across the amplicon as the pyrosequencing measurement was consistently lower than expected for a homogeneously methylated template and was called as inaccurate by the software. The annealing temperature increases along the x-axis by 2 °C for each step as indicated. The mismatched (mm) primers for CDKN2B used different annealing temperatures as indicated but were still used in 2 °C increments. The colour scales were set so that the target measurement reflecting the actual level of methylation is shown as white (25 in the 25% methylated templates (panel a) and 50 in the 50% methylated templates (panel b)). Because of this, the same methylation values have different colours for the 25 and 50% dilutions. The scales at the bottom represent the colour coding for the 25 and 50% mixtures, respectively. The numbering in each scale indicates the lowest value for each colour, i.e. 11 represents 11–20
Fig. 3Effect of substitutions and temperature on bias for heterogeneously methylated templates. Two cell lines (KG1 and MDA-MB-231) were chosen that were respectively heterogeneously methylated for CDKN2B (panel a) and DAPK1 (panel b). The rows represent the different substitutions at the variable sites across the range of annealing temperatures used for each substitution. The numbers at the top are the CpG dinucleotides ordered across each amplicon. Only the CpGs that are not always methylated in the cell lines are shown. The final CpG in both assays has been omitted as the pyrosequencing measurement was called as inaccurate by the software. The annealing temperature increases along the y-axis by 2 °C for each step as indicated. Based on the homogeneous methylation data, where the lowest annealing temperature for the N-containing primers was the most accurate measurement of DNA methylation, the same conditions have been chosen as the standard for the measurement of DNA methylation in these tables (shaded in grey with the actual values measured). The values shown in the rest of the figure are deviations from the standard set of measurements (the raw data is shown in Additional file 1: Figure S1). The scale has been set so that minimal deviations from the standard (±5%) are in white. The colour scale indicating deviation from the standard is common for the two tables