| Literature DB >> 35883104 |
Nicole Gull1, Michelle R Jones1, Pei-Chen Peng1, Beth Y Karlan2,3, Simon A Gayther4,5, Simon G Coetzee1, Tiago C Silva6, Jasmine T Plummer1,7, Alberto Luiz P Reyes1, Brian D Davis1,7, Stephanie S Chen1,7, Kate Lawrenson1,2,8, Jenny Lester2,3, Christine Walsh2,8, Bobbie J Rimel2,8, Andrew J Li2,8, Ilana Cass9, Yonatan Berg10, John-Paul B Govindavari11, Joanna K L Rutgers11, Benjamin P Berman1,10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Little is known about the role of global DNA methylation in recurrence and chemoresistance of high grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSOC).Entities:
Keywords: Chemoresistance; Computational methods; Epigenetics; High grade serous ovarian cancer; Methylation; Translational research; Whole genome bisulfite sequencing
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35883104 PMCID: PMC9327231 DOI: 10.1186/s13046-022-02440-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 0392-9078
Fig. 1Clinical features of high grade serous ovarian cancer patients with recurrent disease: A Location of primary and recurrent tumors in women with and without germline BRCA1/2 mutations; B Disease course for each patient. Filled circles indicate tumors that were profiled in this study, open circles tumors that were collected but not profiled; C Women carrying germline BRCA1/2 mutations have an improved survival compared to non BRCA1/2 mutation carriers; D Sample selection and QC process for inclusion in analysis
Fig. 2High grade serous ovarian cancers show heterogeneous patterns of genome-wide methylation: A Both primary and recurrent tumors show heterogeneous patterns of methylation across the genome, with many tumors showing extensive hypomethylation on the X chromosome (CpG values are averaged across 10kB windows, minus ENCODE ‘blacklist’ regions); B Examples of two regions on chromosome 1q42.13 and 22q13.33, that show differentially methylated regions (boxed regions) from two comparisons—Primary vs Recurrent tumors (left) and BRCA1/2 carrier vs BRCA1/2 non-carrier (right)
Fig. 3Hypermethylation within partially methylated domains (PMDs) in high grade serous ovarian cancers is driven by soloWCGWs: A Illustration of PMD-masking strategy prior to calling differentially methylated regions. PMDs were identified as described in methods, and then those genomic regions were masked out of subsequent analyses. B Most PMDs detected across the cohort were unique to a single tumor, with only 2% of PMDs observed in more than 30 tumors; C Principal components (PC) analysis identifies a large proportion of the variance between tumors was due to methylation at soloWCGW sites within PMDs. Masking the genome for common PMDs and ovcaPMDs removed much of the variance; D Pairwise comparison for all possible tumor pairs. The strong correlation between PMD soloWCGW difference and pairwise Euclidean distance was lost after masking PMDs
Fig. 4Methylation and transcription are largely preserved between primary and recurrent tumors from each patient, as shown by the expression of genes within partially methylated domains (PMDs): A Genes within PMDs shared by multiple tumor specimens are less expressed (left) but more variable in their expression (right) than genes outside of PMDs; B The vast majority of tumor suppressor genes in cancer and genes that form the ovarian cancer molecular subtypes defined by The Cancer Genome Atlas are located outside of PMDs; C Intra-patient pairwise Euclidean distances were significantly smaller than inter-patient distance or the intra-stage stage distance in both methylation (top) and gene expression (below) from paired RNA-Seq
Fig. 5Significant differences in methylation and expression by BRCA1/2 mutation carrier status: A 135 differentially methylated regions (DMRs) were identified in tumors from BRCA1/2 carriers compared to non-carriers with a trend towards hypermethylation in tumors from non-carrier; 101 regions hypermethylated in tumors from BRCA1/2 non-carriers compared to only 34 regions hypermethylated tumors from mutation carriers; B Principal components analysis using genome-wide CpG methylation level after PMD masking shows a trend towards differences in tumors based on BRCA1/2 carrier status; C Principal components analysis of gene expression data shows a trend towards clustering of tumors based on BRCA1/2 carrier status D Volcano plot of differentially expressed genes comparing tumors from BRCA1/2 carriers vs non-carriers. Significantly up-regulated genes in tumors from BRCA1/2 carriers are colored orange (Padj < 0.05), significantly down-regulated genes are colored purple; E KEGG gene set enrichment analysis for up-(orange) and down-(purple) differentially expressed genes in tumors from BRCA1/2 carriers vs non-carriers; F Individual genes where methylation levels within hypermethylated regions in tumors from BRCA1/2 non-carriers were correlated with gene expression (P-value < 0.005); NAGLU, CDK2AP1, FGF18