| Literature DB >> 30142958 |
Daniela Barros-Silva1, C Joana Marques2,3, Rui Henrique4,5,6, Carmen Jerónimo7,8.
Abstract
DNA methylation is an epigenetic modification that plays a pivotal role in regulating gene expression and, consequently, influences a wide variety of biological processes and diseases. The advances in next-generation sequencing technologies allow for genome-wide profiling of methyl marks both at a single-nucleotide and at a single-cell resolution. These profiling approaches vary in many aspects, such as DNA input, resolution, coverage, and bioinformatics analysis. Thus, the selection of the most feasible method according with the project's purpose requires in-depth knowledge of those techniques. Currently, high-throughput sequencing techniques are intensively used in epigenomics profiling, which ultimately aims to find novel biomarkers for detection, diagnosis prognosis, and prediction of response to therapy, as well as to discover new targets for personalized treatments. Here, we present, in brief, a portrayal of next-generation sequencing methodologies' evolution for profiling DNA methylation, highlighting its potential for translational medicine and presenting significant findings in several diseases.Entities:
Keywords: DNA methylation; epigenomics; next-generation sequencing; single-cell resolution
Year: 2018 PMID: 30142958 PMCID: PMC6162482 DOI: 10.3390/genes9090429
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096
Comparison of key features of the different genome-wide approaches for DNA methylation profiling. CpGs: Cytosine-phosphate-Guanine; bp: base pair.
| Affinity Enrichment-Based Methods | Restriction Enzymes-Based Methods | Bisulfite Conversion-Based Methods | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| ~150 bp | Single-base | Single-base |
|
| ~30–50 million reads | ~10 million reads | >500 million reads |
|
| ~23 million CpGs | ~2 million CpGs | >28 million CpGs |
|
| Cost-effective method | High sensitivity with lower costs | Evaluate methylation status of every CpG site |
|
| Biased toward hypermethylated regions | CpGs in regions without the enzyme restriction site are not covered | Higher costs |
|
| Suitable for rapid, large scale and low-resolution studies | Suitable for site-specific/targeted studies | Suitable for high resolution studies |
Figure 1Evolution of next-generation sequencing-based techniques applied to DNA methylation profiling. BS-Seq: bisulfite sequencing; MeDIP-Seq: methylated DNA immunoprecipitation sequencing; RRBS-Seq: reduced representation bisulfite sequencing; WGBS: whole genome bisulfite sequencing; MethylCap-Seq: methylation capture sequencing; MBD-Seq: methyl-CpG binding domain sequencing; oxBS.Seq: oxidative bisulfite sequencing; TAB-Seq: TET-associated bisulfite sequencing; BSAS: bisulfite amplicon sequencing.
Comparison of characteristics of the main next-generation sequencing technologies.
| Sequencing Platform Developers | Sequencing Principle | Key Features | Limitations | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Sequencing by synthesis | High throughput | Higher cost per read | [ |
|
| Polymerization | Simple detection method | Low read number per run | [ |
|
| Single molecule real time ligation | Single molecule detection and long read length | High error rates (13%) and low read number per run | [ |
|
| Nanopore sensing | Single molecule and label-free detection with reduced costs | High error rates (38.2%) | [ |