| Literature DB >> 33008446 |
Benjamin E Decato1, Jianghan Qu2, Xiaojing Ji2, Elvin Wagenblast3,4,5, Simon R V Knott3,6,7, Gregory J Hannon3,6,8, Andrew D Smith9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Partially methylated domains (PMDs) are a hallmark of epigenomes in reproducible and specific biological contexts, including cancer cells, the placenta, and cultured cell lines. Existing methods for deciding whether PMDs exist in a sample, as well as their identification, are few, often tailored to specific biological questions, and require high coverage samples for accurate identification.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; DNA methylation; Hidden Markov models; Partially methylated domains
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33008446 PMCID: PMC7532633 DOI: 10.1186/s13072-020-00363-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epigenetics Chromatin ISSN: 1756-8935 Impact factor: 4.954
Fig. 1Comparison of PMD identification methods. a Comparison of PMD estimates from all three methods on chromosome 6 for three samples with substantial variation in PMD depth. b Pairwise Jaccard index distributions comparing within-cancer-type and between-cancer-type for PMD sets identified using each method. c Pairwise Jaccard index heatmaps of TCGA cancer sample PMDs identified by each method. d Effect of downsampling and low coverage on PMD estimates. e Jaccard index of downsampled PMD estimates with their respective full-coverage sample for all human PMD-containing samples
Fig. 2Data-driven decision of PMD state. a Fraction of genome covered and mean segment size of segmentation results on all samples studied, with cutoffs drawn to delineate PMD-containing from non-PMD-containing. b Chosen bin sizes and sequencing depth for all samples used in the study. c Genomic locations of segments in PCs vs non-PCs
Fig. 3Properties of conserved PMDs. a Observed/expected ratios for genes and retrotransposon families inside PMDs. b Metagene plot showing methylation levels and CpG density near boundaries of PMDs. c Histograms showing distance from each RefSeq TSS and TES to its nearest PMD boundary. d PMD depth as a function of 50-kb bin PMD conservation across human samples. e PMD depth boxplots in cultured vs primary cancer samples
Fig. 4Escapee genes. a Browser plot showing tight association of replication timing and PMD state. b Replication timing for 50-kb bins inside PMDs with high () medium (33-66%) or low (0–33%) mean methylation level. c Stitched browser plot showing 6 most conserved escapee genes in human and their methylation state in other species. d Escapee replication timing violin plots. e TPM distributions for genes inside PMDs, escapees, and outside of PMDs in PMD-containing samples and healthy analogues
Fig. 5Sequence evolution and PMD state. a Syntenic block PMD conservation between mouse and human breast cancer. b TPM distributions for orthologous genes between mouse and human binned by PMD state in each species. c Comparison of local gene density for orthologous genes between mouse and human by PMD state