Global Methylome Scores Correlate with Histological Subtypes of Colorectal Carcinoma and Show Different Associations with Common Clinical and Molecular Features.
Author: Turpín, María del Carmen; Pérez Sanz, Fernando; García Solano, José; Sebastián León, Patricia; Trujillo Santos, J.; Carbonell, Pablo; Estrada, Eduardo; Tuomisto, Anne; Herruzo Priego, Irene
; Fennell, Lochlan J.; Mäkinen, Markus J.; Rodríguez Braun, Edith; J. Whitehall, Vicki L.; Conesa, Ana; Conesa Zamora, Pablo
Abstract: Background. The typical methylation patterns associated with cancer are
hypermethylation at gene promoters and global genome hypomethylation. Aberrant CpG island
hypermethylation at promoter regions and global genome hypomethylation have not been
associated with histological colorectal carcinomas (CRC) subsets. Using Illumina’s 450 k Infinium
Human Methylation beadchip, the methylome of 82 CRCs were analyzed, comprising different
histological subtypes: 40 serrated adenocarcinomas (SAC), 32 conventional carcinomas (CC) and 10
CRCs showing histological and molecular features of microsatellite instability (hmMSI‐H), and,
additionally, 35 normal adjacent mucosae. Scores reflecting the overall methylation at 250 bp, 1 kb
and 2 kb from the transcription starting site (TSS) were studied. Results. SAC has an intermediate
methylation pattern between CC and hmMSI‐H for the three genome locations. In addition, the shift
from promoter hypermethylation to genomic hypomethylation occurs at a small sequence between
250 bp and 1 Kb from the gene TSS, and an asymmetric distribution of methylation was observed
between both sides of the CpG islands (N vs. S shores). Conclusion. These findings show that
different histological subtypes of CRC have a particular global methylation pattern depending on
sequence distance to TSS and highlight the so far underestimated importance of CpGs aberrantly
hypomethylated in the clinical phenotype of CRCs.
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