4.7 Article

Deep sequencing reveals distinct patterns of DNA methylation in prostate cancer

Journal

GENOME RESEARCH
Volume 21, Issue 7, Pages 1028-1041

Publisher

COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB PRESS, PUBLICATIONS DEPT
DOI: 10.1101/gr.119347.110

Keywords

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Funding

  1. American Association of Cancer Research
  2. Canary Foundation
  3. American Cancer Society
  4. Prostate Cancer Foundation
  5. NIH [1K99CA129565-01A1, R01HG005119, CA009676-18, P50CA69568, R01 R01CA132874]
  6. Department of Defense (DOD) [PC080665, BC075023, W81XWH-08-0110]
  7. Early Detection Research Network [U01 CA111275]
  8. Burroughs Welcome Foundation
  9. Doris Duke Charitable Foundation
  10. National Center for Integrative Biomedical Informatics [U54 DA021519]

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Beginning with precursor lesions, aberrant DNA methylation marks the entire spectrum of prostate cancer progression. We mapped the global DNA methylation patterns in select prostate tissues and cell lines using MethylPlex-next-generation sequencing (M-NGS). Hidden Markov model-based next-generation sequence analysis identified similar to 68,000 methylated regions per sample. While global CpG island (CGI) methylation was not differential between benign adjacent and cancer samples, overall promoter CGI methylation significantly increased from similar to 12.6% in benign samples to 19.3% and 21.8% in localized and metastatic cancer tissues, respectively (P-value < 2 3 10(-16)). We found distinct patterns of promoter methylation around transcription start sites, where methylation occurred not only on the CGIs, but also on flanking regions and CGI sparse promoters. Among the 6691 methylated promoters in prostate tissues, 2481 differentially methylated regions (DMRs) are cancer-specific, including numerous novel DMRs. A novel cancer-specific DMR in the WFDC2 promoter showed frequent methylation in cancer (17/22 tissues, 6/6 cell lines), but not in the benign tissues (0/10) and normal PrEC cells. Integration of LNCaP DNA methylation and H3K4me3 data suggested an epigenetic mechanism for alternate transcription start site utilization, and these modifications segregated into distinct regions when present on the same promoter. Finally, we observed differences in repeat element methylation, particularly LINE-1, between ERG gene fusion-positive and -negative cancers, and we confirmed this observation using pyrosequencing on a tissue panel. This comprehensive methylome map will further our understanding of epigenetic regulation in prostate cancer progression.

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