| Literature DB >> 28747224 |
Christopher Schröder1, Elsa Leitão2, Stefan Wallner3, Gerd Schmitz3, Ludger Klein-Hitpass4, Anupam Sinha5, Karl-Heinz Jöckel6, Stefanie Heilmann-Heimbach7,8, Per Hoffmann7,8,9,10, Markus M Nöthen7,8, Michael Steffens11, Peter Ebert12,13, Sven Rahmann1, Bernhard Horsthemke14.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is increasing evidence for inter-individual methylation differences at CpG dinucleotides in the human genome, but the regional extent and function of these differences have not yet been studied in detail. For identifying regions of common methylation differences, we used whole genome bisulfite sequencing data of monocytes from five donors and a novel bioinformatic strategy.Entities:
Keywords: Allele-specific methylation; DNA methylation; Differentially methylated regions; Genome-wide association study; Haplotype; Inter-individual variability; Methylation array; SNP genotyping; Whole genome bisulfite sequencing
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28747224 PMCID: PMC5530492 DOI: 10.1186/s13072-017-0144-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epigenetics Chromatin ISSN: 1756-8935 Impact factor: 4.954
Fig. 1Overview of the study
Fig. 2Detection of DMRs. a Scheme of the generation of synthetic methylomes. b Representative example of an inter-individual DMR (DMR128, chr17:6558143-6558981) visualized in the IGV browser. Only a subset of reads is shown for each individual (Hm01, Hm02, Hm03, Hm05 and M55900). Red methylated CpG; blue unmethylated CpG
Fig. 3Differences in DNA methylation of the DMRs and the upstream and downstream flanking regions. Most of the DMRs are flanked by regions with higher methylation levels (quadrant at lower left)
Fig. 4Histone modifications of 2 kb regions centered on the 157 inter-individual DMRs. a Heatmaps of histone modification signals for Hm03 (left) and Hm05 (right). Heatmaps show log2 ratio ChIP signal over input for six different histone modifications. b Scatter plots showing difference in histone modification signals between Hm05 and Hm03 as a function of methylation differences between the two donors. Active histone marks are inversely correlated with DNA methylation (linear regression)
Fig. 5Correlation between DNA methylation and gene expression. a Scatter plot of the differences in gene expression levels of the putative target genes identified by GREAT and the differences in DMR methylation in donors Hm03 and Hm05. b Scatter plot of the differences in transcript isoform levels of genes harboring a DMR and the differences in methylation of the 77 intragenic DMRs
Fig. 6Allele-specific DNA methylation. a Allele-specific DNA methylation for 14 DMRs (16 SNPs) performed by targeted deep bisulfite sequencing and sorting of reads by SNP allele. Average CpG methylated fractions in reads containing one or the other allele. Results are mean ± SD from 1 to 4 independent donor samples heterozygous for the correlating SNPs. *p value < 0.05; **p value < 0.01; ***p value < 0.001; ns, not significant (two-tailed paired Student’s t test); nd, not done; #, SNPs discovered after GWAS. b Scatter plot showing the absolute differences in methylation between reads containing one or the other SNP allele as a function of the absolute distance to the SNP. Each dot represents one CpG
Fig. 7Representative results of the GWASs. One example is shown for the DMR5 CpG included in the Illumina 450k array (position 1:42248998). a Histogram of methylation level distribution. b Manhattan plot. Dashed vertical line DMR position. Horizontal line GWAS significance threshold. c Zoom with imputed SNPs. Blue lead-SNP. Dashed vertical line DMR position. Horizontal line GWAS significance threshold