Abstract
Gliomas demonstrate epigenetic dysregulation exemplified by the Glioma CpG Island Methylator Phenotype (G-CIMP) seen in IDH1 mutant tumors. 5-Hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC) is implicated in glioma pathogenesis; however, its role in IDH1 mutant gliomas is incompletely understood. To characterize 5hmC in IDH1 mutant gliomas further, we examine 5hmC in a cohort of IDH1 mutant and wild-type high-grade gliomas (HGG) using a quantitative locus-specific approach. Regions demonstrating high 5hmC abundance and differentially hydroxymethylated regions (DHMR) enrich for enhancers implicated in glioma pathogenesis. Among these regions, IDH1 mutant tumors possess greater 5hmC compared to wild type. 5hmC contributes to overall methylation status of G-CIMP genes. 5hmC targeting gene body regions correlates significantly with increased gene expression. In particular, a strong correlation between increased 5hmC and increased gene expression is identified for genes highly expressed in the IDH1 mutant cohort. Overall, locus-specific gain of 5hmC targeting regulatory regions and associated with overexpressed genes suggests a significant role for 5hmC in IDH1 mutant HGG.
Similar content being viewed by others
Avoid common mistakes on your manuscript.
Introduction
Gliomas are the most common primary human brain tumor, with high-grade gliomas (HGG) of World Health Organization (WHO) grades III and IV being the most aggressive. Grade IV tumors (Glioblastoma, GBM) carry the worst prognosis with a median overall survival (OS) of approximately 15 months [61]. GBM may arise de novo or secondarily from lower grade gliomas (LGG). Recent molecular analyses through The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) have identified four molecular GBM subtypes with unique gene expression, DNA copy number, and mutation profiles [70]. Among recurrent events is mutation of isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1). IDH1 mutation occurs in 12% of GBMs and with greater frequency among LGGs and secondary GBMs [54, 76]. In addition, IDH1 mutation occurs predominantly in the proneural GBM subtype and is associated with the Glioma CpG Island Methylator Phenotype (G-CIMP) [10, 52].
IDH1 mutation in glioma results in a gain of function, producing the oncometabolite 2-hydroxyglutarate (2-HG) [75]. 2-HG inhibits α-ketoglutarate-dependent enzymes including the Ten-Eleven Translocation (TET) family of DNA dioxygenases [75]. TET proteins play a critical role in active cytosine demethylation, oxidizing 5-methylcytosine (5mC) to 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC). Further oxidation steps generate 5-formylcytosine (5fC) and 5-carboxylcytosine (5caC), which are converted to cytosine through thymine DNA glycosylase base excision repair mechanisms [8, 66]. IDH1 mutation-mediated inhibition of TET proteins is one mechanism altering the DNA methylation landscape in G-CIMP gliomas [68]. Traditional approaches to quantify methylation using bisulfite (BS) conversion strategies, including those used to define G-CIMP, do not distinguish 5mC from 5hmC [7, 52]. 5hmC is a stable epigenetic mark with evidence suggesting a role for 5hmC in regulating gene expression, beyond being simply a passive intermediate in the process of active demethylation [8, 41, 51, 59].
Loss of 5hmC is observed in multiple human malignancies [6, 19, 28, 35]. While 5hmC is globally reduced in IDH1 wild-type (IDH1 wt) GBM, regions with increased 5hmC associate with enhancers and actively transcribed genes [28]. Conflicting reports exist regarding the influence of IDH1 mutation on global levels of 5hmC in gliomas, and to date no quantitative genome-wide locus-specific interrogation of 5hmC status in IDH1 mutant (IDH1 mt) tumors has been published to our knowledge [15, 16, 26, 28, 32, 33, 39, 48, 53, 67, 75, 78].
Taking advantage of oxidative bisulfite (OxBS) chemistry, 5mC can be differentiated from 5hmC. Herein, we examine a cohort of IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt HGG using BS and OxBS treatment, with downstream analysis on the Illumina Infinium® MethylationEPIC BeadChip. We characterize 5hmC abundance and localization in IDH1 mt tumors. We confirm 5hmC localization to enhancers in IDH1 wt tumors and extend this finding to unique enhancer regions in IDH1 mt tumors. The contribution of 5hmC to G-CIMP gene methylation is quantified. A significant association between gene body hydroxymethylation and gene expression is identified. Importantly, correlation between 5hmC abundance and gene expression for differentially expressed genes between IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt tumors is performed, demonstrating a significant association between increased 5hmC and genes upregulated in IDH1 mt tumors.
Materials and methods
Study population
Fresh frozen human glioma samples (n = 21) were obtained from the University Health Network Brain Tumor Bank (Toronto, Canada). Samples were prospectively collected between 2002 and 2015 with written informed consent prior to surgery for use of tissues for research purposes. Local institutional review board approval for the work outlined in this manuscript was obtained prior to study initiation. DNA was extracted from specimens using the PureLink Genomic DNA kit (Invitrogen), and quantified using the Qubit dsDNA kit (Invitrogen). RNA was extracted using the Ambion WT kit (Ambion). RNA quality was assessed using Agilent 2100 Bioanalyzer.
IDH1 and IDH2 mutation sequencing
IDH1 and IDH2 mutation status were confirmed by Sanger sequencing across the IDH1 (IDH1 R132) and IDH2 (IDH2 R172) mutation hotspots using the following published primer sets [21]:
-
IDH1-Fwd 5′-GCACGGTCTTCAGAGAAGCCA-3′
-
IDH1-Rev 5′-AGGGGATCCTATTGTGCAGCCAG-3′
-
IDH2-Fwd 5′-AGCCCATCATCTGCAAAAAC-3′
-
IDH2-Rev 5′-CTAGGCGAGGAGCTCCAGT-3′
For IDH1, genomic DNA was amplified using the following PCR cycling parameters: denaturation at 95 °C for 3 min, followed by 35 cycles of 95 °C for 30 s, 56 °C for 30 s and 72 °C at 45 s), with final extension at 72 °C for 10 min. For IDH2, an annealing temperature of 60 °C was used.
Gene expression profiling
RNA was isolated from fresh frozen specimens as outlined above. Insufficient specimen was available from RNA extraction for gene expression profiling on one sample (sample 3921). RNA was assessed for purity by A260:A280 ratio, and RNA integrity using Agilent 2100 Bioanalyzer. Approximately 500 ng per sample was used as input for gene expression analysis by Affymetrix GeneChip™ Human Gene 2.0 ST array (Affymetrix). Arrays were processed by The Centre for Applied Genomics core facility (TCAG, Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Canada). Gene expression datasets were measured using the Affymetrix GeneChip Scanner 3000. Datasets were log2 transformed and quantile normalized. Robust Multiarray Average (RMA) background correction and additional quality checks were performed. Samples were combined into one data file before performing further analyses. To identify significant differences in gene expression between IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt tumors, p values were calculated using the function ANOVA in Partek Genomics Suite software (Partek, St. Louis USA). A log-rank test was performed to calculate p values. Genes with adjusted p values less than 0.05 and fold change above 2 were selected for further analyses. Gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA) of genes upregulated in IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt tumors was performed using the Broad Institute Molecular Signatures Database (version 6.0) [62].
DNA hydroxymethylation and methylation profiling
Tumor DNA was isolated as described above. DNA for each sample (1 μg/sample) was processed in parallel using BS or OxBS conversion using the TrueMethyl® Array kit (Cambridge Epigenetix), optimized for downstream analysis using the Illumina BeadChip array. The ssDNA concentrations of BS- and OxBS-converted aliquots were quantified with the Qubit ssDNA kit (Invitrogen). Methylcytosine and hydroxymethylcytosine profiling was performed as described by Stewart et al., adapted to the Illumina Infinium® MethylationEPIC BeadChip [60]. 200 ng of BS- or OxBS-converted DNA was used as input for methylation profiling. Subsequent sample processing and Illumina BeadChip hybridization was performed by the Princess Margaret Genomics Centre core facility (Toronto, Canada).
hMeDIP-Seq and hMeDIP-PCR validation
DNA (1 μg) from an expanded set of IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt gliomas was isolated as described above, and sheared by Bioruptor Pico sonicator (Diagenode). Sample clean-up was performed using AMPure XP beads (Agencourt), followed by end repair and adapter ligation using the NEBNext Ultra DNA Library Prep Kit (Illumina). Adaptor-ligated samples were size selected for 250–350 bp fragments using AMPure XP beads, denatured, and subject to overnight hydroxymethylation-dependent immunoprecipitation (hMeDIP) using an anti-5-hydroxymethylcytosine-specific antibody (Millipore, Clone HMC31). Prior to sonication and immunoprecipitation, all samples were spiked with an exogenous non-human 5hmC DNA control sequence (Zymo). PCR amplification and final library preparation for multiplexed sequencing of samples was performed using NEBnext Multiplex Oligos for Illumina as per the manufacturer’s instructions. Sequencing was performed on an Illumina HiSeq 2500 platform by The Centre for Applied Genomics (TCAG, Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Canada). Fastq files were checked for quality control using FastQC (v0.11.4) and adapters were trimmed using Cutadapt (v1.8). The resulting trimmed sequences were aligned to the UCSC GRCh37 genome using bwa (v0.7.8) and default parameters. Bam files were then imported into the MEDIPS (v1.20.1) package in R (v3.2.2), and their enrichment scores were determined to filter any samples that would fail the downstream analysis. The resulting samples that passed enrichment estimations (IDH1 mt n = 24, IDH1 wt n = 21) were run through MEDIPS using only unique reads to determine differentially hydroxymethylated regions across the genome between IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt, using the following parameters (uniq = 1e-3, extend = 300, shift = 1, ws = 100). Significant regions were then filtered by keeping regions that had an average of 3 or more reads, and whose log fold change was greater than ± 1, respectively. These regions were then intersected with gene annotations using bedtools (v2.21.0) to determine which genes have increased or decreased hydroxymethylation with IDH1 mutation.
For hMeDIP-PCR, primers were designed flanking Illumina probe sites of interest, and quantitative real-time PCR performed to identify enrichment following immunoprecipitation. PCR results were normalized using PCR data for the spike-in Zymo control to control for IP efficiency based on the following formula: Enrichment = (Enrichmenttarget)/(EnrichmentZymo) [37]. PCR primer sequences are listed in suppl. Table 1 (Online Resource 1).
Data analysis
Loading and processing of methylation data were conducted using the Bioconductor package (version 3.3). Normalization and background correction of raw data IDAT files generated by Illumina Infinium® MethylationEPIC BeadChips was performed using ssNoob in the Bioconductor package minfi (version 1.20.0) [2]. Quality analysis of samples was performed using principle component analysis (PCA). Probes corresponding to SNPs as well as those on sex chromosomes were removed, resulting in a total number of probes remaining for downstream analysis of 816,980. Pre-processed and normalized OxBS data were subtracted from BS data to generate ∆β-values representing 5hmC β-values per probe. Negative 5hmC β-values were adjusted to a value of 1 × 10−7 to approximate a zero value for 5hmC for those probes, as 5mC levels cannot exceed total mC and thus negative values represent technical artifact. Array annotation used for subsequent analyses was the IlluminaHumanMethylationEPICmanifest (version 0.3.0) available in Bioconductor. Calculated 5hmC β-values were compared with an alternate approach, employing the R package OxyBS to generate probe level 5hmC β-values, demonstrating strong concordance across all probe 5hmC β-values (suppl. Figure 1a, b, Online Resource 2) [24].
Top 1% 5hmC probes were identified by calculating the top 1% mean 5hmC β-values for all tumors in either the IDH1 mt or IDH1 wt cohorts [28]. Top 1% 5hmC probes identified by our approach demonstrated over 99.9% concordance with those identified using the OxyBS package (suppl. Figure 1c, d, Online Resource 2). Differentially methylated regions (DMRs) and DHMRs were identified through downstream analysis of minfi pre-processed/normalized data for 5mC or 5hmC using the Bumphunter algorithm (adjusted p value of 0.05, minimum number of probes = 7) in the Bioconductor package ChAMP [47]. Annotation of top 1% and DHMR probes with respect to genomic regions was performed using the package Goldmine in Bioconductor (https://github.com/jeffbhasin/goldmine) [5]. For hypergeometric probability calculations, the total number of protein-coding genes in the human genome was estimated at 20,345, based on GRCh37 (GENCODE v19). To generate volcano plots, mean 5hmC β-values for probes (all probes, non-overlapping top 1% probes, and DHMR probes) for IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt cohorts were calculated. Volcano plots were generated by calculating fold change and p value using lmFit and ebayes functions, demonstrating the degree of differential 5hmC across probes between IDH1 cohorts. Cumulative density plots were generated using ecdf plot functions in the ggplot2 package.
Top 1% and DHMR probe enrichment for enhancer-related probes was performed by Cochran–Mantel–Haenszel test in Bioconductor. Annotations used to identify enhancer regions included the IlluminaHumanMethylationEPICmanifest. In addition, publically available H3K27Ac ChIP-seq enhancer data for three primary human GBM tumor propagating cell lines (MGG4, MGG6, MGG8), and H3K27Ac ChIP-seq enhancer and super enhancer data for normal human astrocytes were used as alternate annotations [23, 65]. Pathway enrichment analysis was performed using GeneAnalytics: pathways and gene ontology (biologic processes) performed using GeneAnalytics: GO-biologic process [4]. For enhancer probe pathway enrichment and GO-biologic process analyses, Illumina annotation was used to define enhancer-related probes.
For 5hmC-based consensus clustering, we used probes identified as being DHMRs that were also identified as being among the top 1% non-overlapping probes for IDH1 mt or IDH1 wt tumors (n = 321). Unsupervised consensus clustering was performed to define the number of clusters in an unbiased fashion, using the Bioconductor package ConsensusClusterPlus [56]. Pearson correlation was used for the distance metric, and Ward for the linkage algorithm, with 1000 re-sampling steps performed (epsilon = 0.8).
Sample clustering based on 5mC (Pearson dissimilarity, ward method) was performed using OxBS-data β-values for all probes for 50 genes identified as significantly hypermethylated in G-CIMP gliomas [52]. For the 5hmC heatmap, probe and tumor samples were sorted in a supervised manner based on probe and tumor location as per the 5mC heatmap, to allow visualization of 5hmC contribution to overall methylation within the IDH1 mt cohort across the 50 G-CIMP gene probes. Spearman correlation coefficients between 5hmC/5mC and gene expression, as well as between 5hmC and 5mC β-values, were calculated using the cor test function in Bioconductor.
Results
IDH1 mutation status and differential gene expression between IDH1 mt and wt gliomas
DNA and mRNA were isolated from 21 fresh frozen human high-grade glioma samples (IDH1 mt n = 12, IDH1 wt n = 9). Sample characteristics and patient demographics are summarized in Table 1. IDH1 mutation was confirmed by Sanger sequencing, with 11/21 samples harboring IDH1 R132H mutations and 1/21 the IDH1 R132C variant (suppl. Figure 2, Online Resource 3). No IDH2 (R172) mutations were identified. The difference in mean age between IDH1 mt (40.6 years) and IDH1 wt (58.8 years) was statistically significant (p value = 0.0009), as expected with IDH1 mutation typically identified in younger cohorts.
Affymetrix HumanGene 2.0 ST arrays were used to profile gene expression, identifying genes with a minimum twofold differential expression between IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt tumors (suppl. Table 2, Online Resource 4). In total, 673 genes were upregulated in IDH1 mt tumors. Gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA) of these genes identified significant overlap with the Verhaak GBM Proneural gene set (p value = 8.59 × 10−90, q value = 2.92 × 10−86) [46, 62].
Quantification and distribution of 5hmC and 5mC in IDH1 mt versus wt gliomas
The mean probe 5hmC β-value for IDH1 mt tumors was 0.046 (standard deviation 0.013) versus 0.037 (standard deviation 0.009) for IDH1 wt tumors. IDH1 mt tumors demonstrated a non-significant trend toward higher mean 5hmC (p value = 0.0916). Overall 5hmC abundance did not strongly parallel 5mC abundance, as Spearman correlation (rs) between mean 5hmC versus 5mC across tumor samples failed to identify a significant correlation (rs = 0.308, p value = 0.1747). While patient age differed significantly between IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt cohorts, no correlation was evident between patient age and mean 5hmC β-values (rs = − 0.02, p value = 0.92).
In contrast to 5mC, cumulative density plots of 5hmC β-values showed near-zero values for most probes, with 5hmC β-values greater than 0.1 accumulating in the 90th percentile for both IDH1 cohorts (suppl. Figure 3a, b, Online Resource 5). Stratifying probes by CpG island feature, 5mC targeted CpG island shelves, followed by shores, and lastly CpG islands in IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt tumors (suppl. Figure 3c, d, Online Resource 5). In contrast, 5hmC targeted CpG island shores and shelves to a similar degree, and more so than CpG islands (suppl. Figure 3e, f, Online Resource 5). Similar patterns have been previously demonstrated in IDH1 wt GBM [28].
Assessment of top 1% and differentially hydroxymethylated region probes
To examine 5hmC further, we performed two parallel analyses: characterization of probes demonstrating the highest 5hmC abundance, and characterization of DHMRs between IDH1 cohorts. To examine regions of high 5hmC abundance, we identified probes within the top 1% mean 5hmC β-values for IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt cohorts (suppl. Table 3, Online Resource 6) [28, 41]. Top 1% 5mC probes for IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt subgroups were also identified (suppl. Table 3, Online Resource 6). For top 1% 5hmC probes, mean β-value for IDH1 mt tumors was 0.189 (standard deviation 0.051) versus 0.157 (standard deviation 0.042) for IDH1 wt tumors. While the mean β-value for the top 1% 5hmC probes was higher in IDH1 mt tumors, this difference was not significant (p value = 0.1424). At the individual tumor level, mean 5hmC β-values for top 1% probes ranged from 0.139 to 0.301 for IDH1 mt tumors, and 0.082 to 0.211 for IDH1 wt tumors. Examining mean 5hmC β-values with respect to patient age, no significant correlation was evident (rs = − 0.20, p value = 0.38). In relation to CpG island features, probes with the greatest 5hmC abundance targeted Open Sea regions, followed by CpG island shores in both IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt tumors (suppl. Figure 4a, Online Resource 7). This was in contrast to top 1% 5mC probes which targeted Open Sea regions followed by CpG islands (suppl. Figure 4b, Online Resource 7). Stratified by gene region, top 1% 5hmC probes predominantly annotated to introns, whereas top 1% 5mC probes targeted promoters (suppl. Figure 4c, d, Online Resource 7). Taken together, this suggests regions with greater 5hmC abundance may exert epigenetic influence within gene body regions or at distal regulatory sites such as enhancer regions, in contrast to the promoter CpG island targeting evidenced by 5mC.
Absolute 5hmC values were an order of magnitude lower than 5mC. As regions with lower 5hmC β-values could conceivably contribute to epigenetic regulation, limiting our analysis to probes within the top 1% 5hmC β-values might exclude regions of significance. As such, we used a second approach identifying DHMRs (adjusted p value threshold of 0.05) between IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt tumors using the Bioconductor package ChAMP, irrespective of absolute β-values [47]. DHMRs consisted of 15,279 probes targeting 1850 annotated genes (suppl. Table 4, Online Resource 8). With respect to CpG island features, DHMR probes targeted CpG islands, followed by CpG island shores, and Open Sea regions (suppl. Figure 4e, Online Resource 7). Annotated by gene region, DHMR probes associated mainly with promoter regions (suppl. Figure 4f, Online Resource 7).
Plotting the difference between mean IDH1 mt 5hmC β-value minus mean IDH1 wt 5hmC β-value per probe (5hmC ∆β-value) against – log10(p value), we noted slightly greater 5hmC in IDH1 mt tumors (Fig. 1a). Comparing top 1% 5hmC probes or DHMR probes, a greater proportion of probes demonstrated increased 5hmC in the IDH1 mt cohort (Fig. 1b, c), suggesting that the bulk of differential hydroxymethylation seen between IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt tumors is secondary to greater hydroxymethylation in the IDH1 mt cohort.
Pathway enrichment and gene ontology analyses for top 1% and DHMR probes
Top 1% 5hmC probes for IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt tumors only partially overlapped (suppl. Figure 5a, Online Resource 9). Pathway enrichment analysis of top 1% 5hmC gene targets identified common and unique pathways between IDH1 cohorts, many of which have been implicated in GBM pathogenesis (suppl. Figure 5b, Online Resource 9). Common pathways included pathways in cancer, ERK signaling, and dopamine D2 receptor transactivation of EGFR. HGF signaling, TGFβ receptor signaling, and apoptotic pathways were unique to IDH1 mt tumors. Pathways exclusive to IDH1 wt tumors included Wnt/Hedgehog/Notch and RAS signaling. Pathway analysis for DHMR probes identified ERK signaling, and Wnt/Hedgehog/Notch signaling in common with top 1% probes. In addition, MYC-mediated transcriptional repression and human embryonic stem cell pluripotency were identified (suppl. Figure 5c, Online Resource 9). Analysis of gene ontology for enriched biological processes identified response to hypoxia, nervous system development and cell differentiation among the most significant processes for DHMR probes (suppl. Table 5, Online Resource 10).
Enhancer and super-enhancer targeting by 5hmC in IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt gliomas
As probes demonstrating the greatest 5hmC localized predominantly in Open Sea regions, we sought to determine if such probes target distal regulatory elements such as enhancer regions. 5hmC enrichment at enhancer and super-enhancer regions has been reported during development, within normal brain, and recently among a cohort of IDH1 wt GBMs [28, 57, 73]. We sought to confirm this finding and determine if it extended to IDH1 mt tumors. Multiple enhancer annotations were used for this analysis. Based on the Illumina Infinium® MethylationEPIC BeadChip annotation, significant association with enhancer regions was demonstrated for DHMR and top 1% 5hmC probes (Fig. 2a). Histone H3 lysine 27 acetylation (H3K27Ac) marks active enhancers, and serves as a surrogate for identifying enhancers genome wide [23]. Publically available H3K27Ac ChIP-seq data for primary human GBM cell lines were used to annotate DHMR and top 1% 5hmC probes, again identifying significant enhancer targeting (Fig. 2b) [65]. Data for GBM cell line MGG6 annotation are shown, with data for MGG4 and MGG8 lines in suppl. Figure 6 (Online Resource 11). Publically available H3K27Ac ChIP-seq data for normal human astrocyte enhancers and super-enhancers were also used to annotate DHMR and top 1% 5hmC probes. Enrichment for probes targeting enhancer regions was seen for DHMR and top 1% 5hmC probes, with even greater enrichment observed for super-enhancers (Fig. 2c, d).
While enhancer targeting by top 1% 5hmC probes was a feature of both IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt tumors, enhancer-related probes demonstrated less than 1/3 overlap between IDH1 cohorts (Fig. 3a). Common pathways identified for top 1% enhancer probes included pathways in cancer, ERK signaling, and tyrosine kinases/adaptors (Fig. 3b). Pathways unique to IDH1 mt top 1% enhancer probes included NFAT and cardiac hypertrophy, integrin pathway, focal adhesion, and actin nucleation by ARP–WASP complex. Pathways exclusive to top 1% IDH1 wt enhancer probes included dopamine D2 receptor transactivation of EGFR, Hippo signaling, DAG and IP3 signaling, cytoskeletal signaling, and Pak signaling. Pathway analysis based on DHMR enhancer probes also identified ERK signaling, focal adhesion, integrin pathway, and actin nucleation by ARP–WASP complex (Fig. 3c). Among additional enriched pathways in DHMR enhancer probes was human embryonic stem cell pluripotency. Analysis of gene ontology for enriched biological processes identified response to hypoxia as the most significant biologic process for DHMR enhancer probes (suppl. Table 6, Online Resource 12).
5hmC-based consensus clustering identifies co-segregation for a subset of IDH1 mutant and wild-type tumors
Consensus clustering was performed based on 5hmC β-values for select probes in common between DHMRs and top 1% probes (n = 321). In total, we identified three robust clusters (suppl. Figures 7, 8, Online Resources 13, 14). Cluster 1 and cluster 3 consisted solely of IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt tumors, respectively. Cluster 2 was mixed, with 2 IDH1 mt and 3 IDH1 wt tumors. Cluster membership did not correlate with patient age or tumor grade. Gene expression analysis identified primarily genes differentially expressed between IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt when comparing clusters 1 and 3, while no significant differentially expressed genes were identified comparing the mixed cluster (cluster 2) with either the pure IDH1 mt or wt clusters (suppl. Table 7, Online Resource 15). These data imply that, while IDH1 status represents one factor altering 5hmC profile, additional mechanisms must influence 5hmC patterns resulting in a mixed IDH1 mt and wt population cluster.
5hmC contributes to overall methylation of G-CIMP signature genes
OxBS-derived 5mC β-values for 50 G-CIMP signature gene probes (Noushmehr 50 genes) were used to perform unsupervised hierarchical clustering of tumors in our dataset [52]. Clustering based purely on 5mC data clearly separated IDH1 wt from IDH1 mt tumors (Fig. 4a). 5hmC β-values for G-CIMP gene probes were depicted as a heatmap in Fig. 4b, organized as per sample and gene location in Fig. 4a. For a subset of IDH1 mt tumors, 5hmC contributed to overall methylation targeting G-CIMP signature genes. Despite this, clustering based on 5mC alone was sufficient to segregate tumors by G-CIMP status. Of G-CIMP signature genes, 28/50 were differentially methylated in our dataset (Fig. 4c). This overlap was statistically significant (hypergeometric probability p value ≤ 1.898 × 10−20). In addition, 22/50 genes were differentially hydroxymethylated (hypergeometric probability p value ≤ 7.918 × 10−11).
To examine the contribution of 5hmC to overall methylation for G-CIMP genes quantitatively, mean 5hmC β-value per gene was expressed as a percentage of the mean total methylation (5mC + 5hmC) (suppl. Table 8, Online Resource 16). Average gene-level 5mC and 5hmC data were used to minimize bias related to differential 5mC or 5hmC that might have affected only a subset of probes for any particular gene. Examining genes with methylation β-values of ≥ 0.3, the overall contribution of 5hmC to total methylation across the 50-gene list ranged from 7.00 to 17.75% per tumor in IDH1 mt tumors. At the individual gene level, percent contribution of 5hmC to overall methylation ranged as high as 40.97%. As an example, Fig. 4d depicts the relative contributions of 5hmC and 5mC to overall methylation for 50 G-CIMP genes in one IDH1 mt tumor (sample 1730, GBM). This GBM specimen demonstrated the greatest 5hmC levels compared to others in the IDH1 mt cohort. This sample was unique among the IDH1 mt tumors as it represented a GBM with gliosarcoma phenotype. It is unknown at present whether elevated 5hmC is a prominent feature of this GBM pathologic subtype.
Hypermethylation of genes in G-CIMP tumors has been mechanistically linked to IDH1 mutation, with the oncometabolite 2-HG inhibiting TET enzyme-mediated demethylation [68]. As such, a strong negative correlation demonstrating 5mC accumulation and 5hmC loss at CpG sites is expected—in particular, for sites representative of G-CIMP. Interestingly, correlation between 5hmC and 5mC for G-CIMP gene probes demonstrated significantly fewer probes with a negative Spearman’s correlation compared to all probes across the MethylationEPIC BeadChip (Fig. 4e). For G-CIMP gene probes, a negative correlation between 5mC and 5hmC was seen in 63.98%, compared to 75.01% for all probes. Our data for all probes are in line with previous reports demonstrating 80% negative correlation between 5hmC and 5mC in IDH1 wt GBMs [28]. The observed reduced difference in proportion of probes with negative correlations between 5mC and 5hmC for G-CIMP gene probes in our data was highly significant (z score = 9.565, p value = 0). These findings suggest that altered 5mC and 5hmC levels in IDH1 mt/G-CIMP gliomas may be due to additional factors aside from impaired TET-mediated conversion of 5mC to 5hmC alone. It is also possible that TET inhibition not only impacts 5mC abundance but also 5hmC due to altered downstream oxidation of 5hmC to 5fC.
Gene body 5hmC correlates with highly expressed genes
To examine the association between 5hmC and gene expression, top 1% 5hmC probes for IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt tumors were correlated with gene expression for the top 20% most highly expressed genes based on our Affymetrix expression data (suppl. Table 9, Online Resource 17). For both IDH1 cohorts, increased 5hmC was significantly associated with genes expressed in the top 20th percentile (p < 0.0001), with an OR of 2.26 (95% CI 2.16–2.36) for IDH1 mt and an OR of 1.93 (95% CI 1.84–2.02) for IDH1 wt tumors. Stratified by genomic region, top 1% 5hmC probes surrounding transcription start sites (TSS200/1st exon probes) were associated with reduced gene expression, whereas probes targeting gene body regions were most significantly associated with elevated gene expression for both IDH1 cohorts (suppl. Table 9, Online Resource 17). Hydroxymethylated IDH1 mt gene body probes demonstrated an OR of 2.27 (95% CI 2.14–2.42) for association with genes expressed in the top 20th percentile, while IDH1 wt gene body probes demonstrated an OR of 2.08 (95% CI 1.95–2.21). This association between gene body hydroxymethylation with increased expression and TSS200/1st exon hydroxymethylation with reduced expression is depicted in suppl. Figure 9a, b (Online Resource 18). To assess the influence of 5mC on gene expression, we assessed probes with mean 5mC β-values ≥ 0.7 as well as those with β-values ≤ 0.3 with respect to their association with genes in either the top or bottom 20th percentiles for gene expression. 5mC probes with β-values ≥ 0.7 targeting TSS200/1st exon regions were significantly associated with reduced gene expression, with an OR of 5.22 (95% CI 4.92–5.55) for IDH1 mt and an OR of 3.96 (95% CI 3.69–4.26) for IDH1 wt tumors (suppl. Table 10, Online Resource 19). In contrast, 5mC probes with β-values ≤ 0.3 targeting TSS200/1st exon regions were significantly associated with genes expressed in the top 20th percentile, with an OR of 5.81 (95% CI 5.53–6.10) for IDH1 mt and an OR of 5.84 (95% CI 5.52–6.17) for IDH1 wt cohorts. 5mC probes targeting gene body regions failed to demonstrate a strong or consistent association with highly expressed genes. The association between genes expressed in the top 20th percentile and probes targeting gene bodies with β-values ≥ 0.7 demonstrated an OR of 0.84 (95% CI 0.82–0.85) for IDH1 mt tumors, and an OR of 1.12 (95% CI 1.11–1.14) for IDH1 wt tumors (suppl. Table 10, Online Resource 19).
5hmC localizes to highly expressed genes in IDH1 mt tumors
To examine the influence of 5hmC on differential gene expression between IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt tumors at a gene-specific level, β-values for top 1% 5hmC and DHMR probes were correlated with differentially expressed genes between IDH1 subgroups. Analysis was restricted to probes showing strong correlations with gene expression (Spearman correlation coefficient values of |r s | ≥ 0.5). In total, 85 probes (75 genes) and 406 probes (128 genes) met these criteria among top 1% and DHMR probes, respectively (suppl. Table 11, Online Resource 20). Among probes demonstrating a significant Spearman correlation with gene expression, the majority targeted gene body regions (80.0% for top 1% probes, 59.1% for DHMR probes).
To assess the relationship between 5hmC and gene expression further, probes were divided into four groups based on whether the Spearman correlation coefficient was positive or negative, and whether the gene target demonstrated increased or decreased expression in the IDH1 mt cohort. For top 1% 5hmC probes, genes demonstrating increased expression in IDH1 mt tumors predominantly demonstrated a positive correlation between 5hmC and gene expression (Fig. 5a-i, Group 1). Among IDH1 mt upregulated genes, only a single probe demonstrated a negative correlation between 5hmC and gene expression (Fig. 5a-i, Group 2). Group 3 probes exhibited a positive correlation between 5hmC and gene expression for genes with reduced expression in IDH1 mt tumors (Fig. 5a-i, Group 3). Lastly, Group 4 probes demonstrated negative correlations between 5hmC and gene expression for genes with decreased expression in IDH1 mt tumors (Fig. 5a-i, Group 4).
To exclude underlying influence of 5mC on gene expression for this subset of probes, correlation between 5mC β-values and gene expression was performed. This analysis did not identify a consistent trend between 5mC and gene expression for Group 1 probes (Fig. 5a-ii, Group 1), whereas Group 2–4 probe Spearman correlations between 5mC and gene expression were largely negative (Fig. 5a-ii, Groups 2–4).
For Group 1, all probes (50/50) demonstrated higher mean 5hmC β-values in IDH1 mt tumors, with 84% of probes targeting transcribed gene body regions, suggesting that increased 5hmC facilitates increased expression (suppl. Table 11, Online Resource 20). For the single Group 2 probe, the mean 5mC β-value was lower among IDH1 mt tumors. Increased expression of this gene target in IDH1 mt tumors may be related to lower 5mC facilitating transcription. For all Group 3 probes, discordant 5hmC and 5mC correlation was observed, with increased 5hmC associated with increased gene expression, and increased 5mC associated with decreased gene expression. In this group, mean 5hmC β-values were higher among IDH1 wt tumors for all probes (7/7), and mean 5mC β-values higher among IDH1 mt for all probes (7/7). Therefore, increased expression of Group 3 genes seen in IDH1 wt tumors may be facilitated by either a positive effect on transcription by 5hmC in IDH1 wt tumors or conversely an inhibitory influence of greater 5mC in IDH1 mt tumors. For Group 4 probes, the negative association between 5hmC and gene expression was largely concordant with a negative association between 5mC and gene expression. In this group, 26/27 probes had greater mean 5mC β-values in IDH1 mt tumors and, therefore, reduced expression in IDH1 mutant tumors for Group 4 genes might be a reflection of the silencing effect of 5mC.
Examining DHMR 5hmC probes, a similar correlation between 5hmC and gene expression was observed for genes overexpressed in IDH1 mt tumors (Fig. 5b-i, Group 1). In comparison to 5hmC, 5mC correlations with gene expression for DHMR Group 1 probes covered a broad spectrum between negative and positive values, as was observed in our top 1% probe analysis (Fig. 5b-ii, Group 1). Similar to results seen with top 1% probes, 5mC Spearman correlations for DHMR Group 2–4 probes were predominantly negative (Fig. 5b-ii, Group 2–4).
As with top 1% Group 1 probes, the majority of DHMR Group 1 probes (118/119) demonstrated higher mean 5hmC β-values in IDH1 mt tumors, with 75.6% targeting transcribed gene body regions (suppl. Table 11, Online Resource 20). Increased 5hmC may facilitate increased expression of these genes in the IDH1 mt cohort. In contrast, DHMR Group 2 probes predominantly demonstrated mean 5hmC β-values higher among IDH1 wt tumors (14/15). As with top 1% probes, nearly all DHMR Group 3 probes (43/44) demonstrated mean 5hmC β-values higher in IDH1 wt tumors. Lastly, among DHMR Group 4 probes, 227/228 had higher mean 5hmC β-values in IDH1 mt tumors, and the majority (213/228) also demonstrated higher mean 5mC β-values among IDH1 mt tumors. As such, reduced expression of Group 4 genes may be mediated epigenetically by 5mC-mediated silencing. The differential distribution for top 1% and DHMR probes based on 5hmC Spearman correlations with gene expression were highly statistically significant (Fig. 5c).
Among gene targets of probes demonstrating a positive correlation between 5hmC and increased gene expression in IDH1 mt tumors (Group 1) were several genes implicated in glioma pathogenesis, including leucine-rich repeat containing G protein-coupled receptor 5 (LGR5). LGR5 has been implicated in promoting the glioma stem cell phenotype [3, 22, 44, 45, 49, 72, 79]. As seen in suppl. Figure 10 (Online Resource 21) our data demonstrated a significant positive Spearman correlation between LGR5 gene expression and 5hmC β-values (rs = 0.703, p value = 0.00055), and a non-significant correlation with 5mC (rs = 0.203, p value = 0.39167). Average log2 expression for LGR5 was 7.08 (standard deviation 0.08) and 5.94 (standard deviation 0.93) for IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt tumors, respectively, representing a 2.41-fold increased expression in IDH1 mt tumors (p value = 0.0065). Average 5hmC β-value for this probe (cg23900866) in IDH1 mt tumors was 0.18 (17.75%, standard deviation 0.139) and in IDH1 wt tumors was 0.03 (3.44%, standard deviation 0.054), representing a statistically significant difference (p value = 0.0097).
Validation of 5hmC targets by hMeDIP
Verification of 5hmC gene targets was performed using an hMeDIP-Seq and hMeDIP-PCR approach on an overlapping, expanded set of IDH1 mt (n = 24) and IDH1 wt (n = 21) tumors (suppl. Table 12, Online Resource 22). Of samples assessed by Illumina MethylationEPIC arrays, 17/21 passed QC and were included in hMeDIP-Seq analysis. Comparing genes identified as differentially hydroxymethylated between IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt tumors by hMeDIP-Seq (n = 2379) versus DHMR genes identified by Illumina MethylationEPIC BeadChip using ChAMP (n = 1850), we found 267 common differentially hydroxymethylated targets. This extent of common targets between the two modalities was statistically significant (hypergeometric probability p ≤ 1.03 × 10−4). Using quantitative hMeDIP-PCR on samples where sufficient DNA was available, we confirmed increased 5hmC among an expanded IDH1 mt tumor cohort (n = 25). Enrichment following hMeDIP was confirmed for multiple gene candidates including LGR5, WDR11-AS1, CRTAC1, GRID1, and FAM155A among the IDH1 mt tumors (suppl. Figure 11, Online Resource 23).
Discussion
IDH1 mutation is observed frequently in LGG and a subset of HGG, resulting in a gain of function leading to 2-HG production [1]. 2-HG inhibits α-ketoglutarate-dependent enzymes, including TET cytosine demethylases [75]. As such, dysregulation of both 5mC and 5hmC homeostasis would be expected in IDH1 mt tumors. In recent years, investigation into the role aberrant 5hmC plays in gliomagenesis has begun. However, to our knowledge, no quantitative locus-specific genome-wide characterization of 5hmC in IDH1 mt gliomas has been published.
Here, we profiled 5hmC in IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt HGGs through parallel processing of BS- and OxBS-converted samples using the Illumina Infinium® MethylationEPIC BeadChip. We characterized the abundance and distribution of 5hmC in IDH1 mt versus IDH1 wt tumors, assessed the contribution of 5hmC to G-CIMP gene methylation, and examined the correlation between 5hmC and gene expression including genes differentially expressed between IDH1 cohorts. One limitation of this study relates to the small cohort sizes examined, and the heterogeneous nature of pathologic diagnoses in the IDH1 mt subgroup. It has been shown, however, that histopathology may fail to reliably distinguish between WHO grade III and IV tumors, and that IDH1 mutation status is a stronger prognostic factor compared to patient age or pathologic diagnostic category [20]. As such, WHO grade III and IV IDH1 mt tumors were assessed together as a single cohort.
In our study, overall levels of hydroxymethylation did not differ significantly between IDH1 cohorts, with an IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt mean probe 5hmC β-values of 4.6%, and 3.7%, respectively. Conflicting reports exist regarding the influence of IDH1 mutation on overall 5hmC abundance in gliomas. Reduced immunopositivity for 5hmC by immunohistochemistry (IHC) has been observed in small cohorts of IDH1 mt tumors [39, 75]. Others studies noted no correlation between IDH1 status and overall 5hmC levels using IHC or liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry [26, 32, 33, 48, 53]. One caveat to our approach was that the MethylationEPIC BeadChip interrogated only a subset of cytosine loci and may not have been representative of whole genome 5hmC abundance. An advantage over previously reported methods, however, was the ability to compare 5hmC in IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt tumors quantitatively in a region-specific manner. For probes in regions with the greatest 5hmC abundance (top 1% probes) or differential hydroxymethylation (DHMR probes), IDH1 mt tumors demonstrated higher levels of 5hmC (Fig. 1).
While this finding is counterintuitive based on a model of reduced demethylation secondary to IDH1 mutant-mediated TET inhibition, other mechanisms exist that influence cellular homeostasis between 5mC and 5hmC. TET enzyme expression and subcellular localization have been shown to influence 5hmC levels in gliomas [48, 53, 67]. TET1-3 expression did not correlate with 5hmC levels in our cohort, and subcellular localization of TET family enzymes was not examined. Correlating additional epigenetic enzyme expression (IDH1/2, DNMT1, DNMT3A/B) and mean tumor 5hmC β-values demonstrated a significant negative correlation between DNMT3B expression and 5hmC when considering loci of high 5hmC abundance (top 1% probes, rs = − 0.603, p value = 0.0049) (suppl. Table 13, Online Resource 24). While DNMT3B is classically viewed as a de novo DNA methyltransferase, it has been identified as possessing 5hmC dehydroxymethylase activity as well, providing another pathway for conversion of 5hmC to C [9]. The fact that multiple factors impacting 5hmC levels have been identified may partly explain the existence of a third mixed cohort of IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt tumors seen when samples were clustered based on 5hmC in our study.
5hmC accumulation at enhancer and super-enhancer regions has been reported [57, 73]. Johnson et al. recently demonstrated enrichment of 5hmC targeting enhancers and super enhancers in IDH1 wt GBM [28]. Our data confirmed this finding and further extended it to include IDH1 mt tumors. Despite this common feature, we observed only partial overlap of enhancer and super enhancer regions marked by 5hmC in our IDH1 cohorts. Cancer cells may acquire super enhancers associated with oncogenes such as MYC that are not present in normal cells [23]. In the GBM cell line u87, super enhancers targeting CCND1, CDK6, EGFR, JUN, MET, MYC, NOTCH2 and RUNX1 have been identified [23]. In our study, super enhancer targets marked by 5hmC in common between IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt tumors and previously implicated in gliomagenesis included EGFR, MYC, CDK6, NOTCH2, RUNX1, PDGFRB, PXN, ID3, IGF1R, NEDD9, and MSI2 [13, 27, 34, 42, 50, 58, 64]. Additional IDH1 wt super-enhancers marked by 5hmC in our dataset and implicated in GBM pathogenesis included WDR1, TGFBI and PVT1 [11, 36, 43, 74]. IDH1 mt-specific super-enhancer targets marked by 5hmC in our cohort and previously implicated in GBM pathogenesis included PDGFC, PRRX1, LIF, AXL, and CD44 [14, 18, 31, 50, 55, 63, 71]. Taken together, these data demonstrated enhancer/super-enhancer targeting by 5hmC as a prominent feature in HGG, with differential targeting observed between IDH1 cohorts.
G-CIMP status is a characteristic feature of IDH1 mt gliomas. To date, the relative contributions of 5mC and 5hmC to overall methylation of G-CIMP genes have not been examined. Our data demonstrated that unsupervised hierarchical clustering based specifically on 5mC β-values from OxBS-treated samples distinctly separated IDH1 mt from IDH1 wt tumors. Despite this, a subset of G-CIMP genes were marked by 5hmC in IDH1 mt tumors, adding to the overall methylation levels measured when using bisulfite conversion-based methods alone. As IDH1 mutation-generated 2-HG inhibits TET-mediated active demethylation, one may expect a strong anti-correlation between probe level 5mC and 5hmC levels, in particular for probes targeting G-CIMP defining genes. Interestingly, we observed the degree of negative correlation between 5mC and 5hmC for G-CIMP genes to be significantly lower than that seen across all probes. One possible explanation for accumulation of both 5mC and 5hmC at G-CIMP gene loci may relate to differential affinities demonstrated by TET1 and TET2 for 5mC versus 5hmC as substrates [25]. Impaired TET activity secondary to IDH1 mutation may have a greater impact on the downstream conversion of 5hmC to 5fC, compared with 5mC to 5hmC. Reduced oxidation of any 5hmC generated may lead to its gradual accumulation over time alongside 5mC at G-CIMP loci.
The mechanisms by which 5mC and 5hmC regulate gene expression are not fully understood; however, some common themes have emerged. DNA methylation (5mC) has traditionally been viewed as an epigenetic silencing event [29]. With improvements in the ability to map 5mC genome wide, its influence on gene expression is now known to exhibit contextual differences depending on the region targeted. Promoter-region CpG island methylation generally correlates negatively with gene expression [29]. The influence of gene body methylation on gene expression remains controversial, with both facilitation and repression of transcription reported in the literature [30, 40, 69, 77]. The use of bisulfite-based methods to quantify gene body methylation when examining its role with respect to gene expression may contribute to the varied results reported. In such cases, the individual contributions from 5mC and 5hmC would not be distinguishable. With respect to 5hmC, gene body hydroxymethylation has been associated with increased transcription [29, 51, 73]. Based on 5mC, 5hmC and gene expression data from our tumor cohorts, we observed 5mC targeting regions flanking the transcription start site (TSS200/1st exon probes) to be associated with reduced gene expression. Gene body 5mC was neither strongly nor consistently associated with gene expression. With respect to hydroxymethylation, we identified gene expression to be most strongly associated with 5hmC targeting gene body regions, in keeping with prior reports [12, 17, 38]. At the gene-specific level, using two separate approaches (examining regions of high 5hmC abundance as well as DHMRs), we observed a highly significant striking pattern of positive correlation between 5hmC and gene expression for genes that are highly expressed in the IDH1 mt cohort (Group 1 probes). In addition, the majority of Group 1 probes targeted gene body regions, with the IDH1 mt tumors almost invariably possessing higher mean 5hmC β-values compared to IDH1 wt tumors. This raises the possibility of 5hmC facilitating increased transcription for this subset of genes in IDH1 mt tumors. With gene body 5hmC associated with increased expression, and the trend towards accumulation of 5hmC observed in IDH1 mt tumors, an intriguing possibility exists that epigenetic dysregulation of gene expression in IDH1 mt gliomas arises, in part, due to impaired oxidation of 5hmC to 5fC across gene bodies, facilitating expression of target genes.
One putative target gene identified in our cohort was LGR5—a downstream target of WNT pathway activation that has been implicated in promoting a cancer stem cell (CSC) phenotype in GBM [22, 44, 49, 72]. Elevated LGR5 expression has been correlated with increasing tumor grade and reduced OS [49, 72]. Knockdown of LGR5 cells reduced proliferation and tumor sphere formation in vitro, and impaired tumor formation in vivo [72]. Mao et al. demonstrated preferential expression of LGR5 in proneural GBMs, consistent with our finding of increased expression in the IDH1 mt cohort [44]. Epigenetic regulation of LGR5 in gliomas has not yet been described. In our study, we observed increased expression of LGR5 among IDH1 mt tumors. A highly significant correlation between 5hmC β-value and gene expression was identified, raising the possibility that LGR5 expression in glioma may be regulated epigenetically by 5hmC.
To conclude, we describe, for the first time, a quantitative locus-specific analysis of 5hmC in IDH1 mt HGGs compared with IDH1 wt tumors. Enhancer and super-enhancer targeting by 5hmC in IDH1 mt tumors was identified, targeting genes implicated in GBM pathogenesis. A paradoxical increase in 5hmC for regions marked by high 5hmC abundance and DHMRs was observed in IDH1 mt tumors. The correlation between 5hmC and 5mC was greater than anticipated for G-CIMP gene probes based on that expected by a model of 5mC accumulation secondary to reduced TET-mediated oxidation to 5hmC alone. A significant correlation between gene body 5hmC and gene expression was identified, including a striking association between increased 5hmC and genes upregulated in IDH1 mt HGGs.
References
Agnihotri S, Aldape K, Zadeh G (2014) Isocitrate dehydrogenase status and molecular subclasses of glioma and glioblastoma. Neurosurg Focus. https://doi.org/10.3171/2014.9.FOCUS14505)
Aryee MJ, Jaffe AE, Corrada-Bravo H, Ladd-Acosta C, Feinberg AP, Hansen KD, Irizarry RA (2014) Minfi: a flexible and comprehensive bioconductor package for the analysis of infinium DNA methylation microarrays. Bioinformatics 30:1363–1369. https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btu049
Bageritz J, Puccio L, Piro RM, Hovestadt V, Phillips E, Pankert T, Lohr J, Herold-Mende C, Lichter P, Goidts V (2014) Stem cell characteristics in glioblastoma are maintained by the ecto-nucleotidase E-NPP1. Cell Death Differ 21:929–940. https://doi.org/10.1038/cdd.2014.12
Ben-Ari Fuchs S, Lieder I, Stelzer G, Mazor Y, Buzhor E, Kaplan S, Bogoch Y, Plaschkes I, Shitrit A, Rappaport N et al (2016) Geneanalytics: an integrative gene set analysis tool for next generation sequencing, RNAseq and microarray DATA. OMICS 20:139–151. https://doi.org/10.1089/omi.2015.0168
Bhasin JM, Ting AH (2016) Goldmine integrates information placing genomic ranges into meaningful biological contexts. Nucleic Acids Res 44:5550–5556. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkw477
Bhattacharyya S, Yu Y, Suzuki M, Campbell N, Mazdo J, Vasanthakumar A, Bhagat TD, Nischal S, Christopeit M, Parekh S et al (2013) Genome-wide hydroxymethylation tested using the HELP-GT assay shows redistribution in cancer. Nucleic Acids Res 41:e157. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkt601
Booth MJ, Ost TW, Beraldi D, Bell NM, Branco MR, Reik W, Balasubramanian S (2013) Oxidative bisulfite sequencing of 5-methylcytosine and 5-hydroxymethylcytosine. Nat Protoc 8:1841–1851. https://doi.org/10.1038/nprot.2013.115
Branco MR, Ficz G, Reik W (2011) Uncovering the role of 5-hydroxymethylcytosine in the epigenome. Nat Rev Genet 13:7–13. https://doi.org/10.1038/nrg3080
Chen CC, Wang KY, Shen CK (2012) The mammalian de novo DNA methyltransferases DNMT3A and DNMT3B are also DNA 5-hydroxymethylcytosine dehydroxymethylases. J Biol Chem 287:33116–33121. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.C112.406975
Christensen BC, Smith AA, Zheng S, Koestler DC, Houseman EA, Marsit CJ, Wiemels JL, Nelson HH, Karagas MR, Wrensch MR et al (2011) DNA methylation, isocitrate dehydrogenase mutation, and survival in glioma. J Natl Cancer Inst 103:143–153. https://doi.org/10.1093/jnci/djq497
Colombo T, Farina L, Macino G, Paci P (2015) PVT1: a rising star among oncogenic long noncoding RNAs. Biomed Res Int 2015:304208. https://doi.org/10.1155/2015/304208
Colquitt BM, Allen WE, Barnea G, Lomvardas S (2013) Alteration of genic 5-hydroxymethylcytosine patterning in olfactory neurons correlates with changes in gene expression and cell identity. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 110:14682–14687. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1302759110
Cox JL, Wilder PJ, Gilmore JM, Wuebben EL, Washburn MP, Rizzino A (2013) The SOX2-interactome in brain cancer cells identifies the requirement of MSI2 and USP9X for the growth of brain tumor cells. PLoS One 8:e62857. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0062857
Edwards LA, Li A, Berel D, Madany M, Kim NH, Liu M, Hymowitz M, Uy B, Jung R, Xu M et al (2017) ZEB1 regulates glioma stemness through LIF repression. Sci Rep 7:69. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-00106-x
El-Habr EA, Dubois LG, Burel-Vandenbos F, Bogeas A, Lipecka J, Turchi L, Lejeune FX, Coehlo PL, Yamaki T, Wittmann BM et al (2017) A driver role for GABA metabolism in controlling stem and proliferative cell state through GHB production in glioma. Acta Neuropathol 133:645–660. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00401-016-1659-5
Eleftheriou M, Pascual AJ, Wheldon LM, Perry C, Abakir A, Arora A, Johnson AD, Auer DT, Ellis IO, Madhusudan S et al (2015) 5-Carboxylcytosine levels are elevated in human breast cancers and gliomas. Clin Epigenetics 7:88. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13148-015-0117-x
Gross JA, Pacis A, Chen GG, Drupals M, Lutz PE, Barreiro LB, Turecki G (2017) Gene-body 5-hydroxymethylation is associated with gene expression changes in the prefrontal cortex of depressed individuals. Transl Psychiatry 7:e1119. https://doi.org/10.1038/tp.2017.93
Guo G, Gong K, Ali S, Ali N, Shallwani S, Hatanpaa KJ, Pan E, Mickey B, Burma S, Wang DH et al (2017) A TNF-JNK-Axl-ERK signaling axis mediates primary resistance to EGFR inhibition in glioblastoma. Nat Neurosci 20:1074–1084. https://doi.org/10.1038/nn.4584
Haffner MC, Chaux A, Meeker AK, Esopi DM, Gerber J, Pellakuru LG, Toubaji A, Argani P, Iacobuzio-Donahue C, Nelson WG et al (2011) GLOBAL 5-hydroxymethylcytosine content is significantly reduced in tissue stem/progenitor cell compartments and in human cancers. Oncotarget 2:627–637
Hartmann C, Hentschel B, Wick W, Capper D, Felsberg J, Simon M, Westphal M, Schackert G, Meyermann R, Pietsch T et al (2010) Patients with IDH1 wild type anaplastic astrocytomas exhibit worse prognosis than IDH1-mutated glioblastomas, and IDH1 mutation status accounts for the unfavorable prognostic effect of higher age: implications for classification of gliomas. Acta Neuropathol 120:707–718. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00401-010-0781-z
Havik AB, Lind GE, Honne H, Meling TR, Scheie D, Hall KS, van den Berg E, Mertens F, Picci P, Lothe RA et al (2014) Sequencing IDH1/2 glioma mutation hotspots in gliomas and malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors. Neuro Oncol 16:320–322. https://doi.org/10.1093/neuonc/not230
Hiraoka K, Hayashi T, Kaneko R, Nasu-Nishimura Y, Koyama-Nasu R, Kawasaki Y, Akiyama T (2015) SOX9-mediated upregulation of LGR5 is important for glioblastoma tumorigenicity. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 460:216–221. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbrc.2015.03.012
Hnisz D, Abraham BJ, Lee TI, Lau A, Saint-Andre V, Sigova AA, Hoke HA, Young RA (2013) Super-enhancers in the control of cell identity and disease. Cell 155:934–947. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2013.09.053
Houseman EA, Johnson KC, Christensen BC (2016) OxyBS: estimation of 5-methylcytosine and 5-hydroxymethylcytosine from tandem-treated oxidative bisulfite and bisulfite DNA. Bioinformatics 32:2505–2507. https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btw158
Hu L, Lu J, Cheng J, Rao Q, Li Z, Hou H, Lou Z, Zhang L, Li W, Gong W et al (2015) Structural insight into substrate preference for TET-mediated oxidation. Nature 527:118–122. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature15713
Jin SG, Jiang Y, Qiu R, Rauch TA, Wang Y, Schackert G, Krex D, Lu Q, Pfeifer GP (2011) 5-Hydroxymethylcytosine is strongly depleted in human cancers but its levels do not correlate with IDH1 mutations. Cancer Res 71:7360–7365. https://doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-11-2023
Jin X, Yin J, Kim SH, Sohn YW, Beck S, Lim YC, Nam DH, Choi YJ, Kim H (2011) EGFR-AKT-smad signaling promotes formation of glioma stem-like cells and tumor angiogenesis by ID3-driven cytokine induction. Cancer Res 71:7125–7134. https://doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-11-1330
Johnson KC, Houseman EA, King JE, von Herrmann KM, Fadul CE, Christensen BC (2016) 5-Hydroxymethylcytosine localizes to enhancer elements and is associated with survival in glioblastoma patients. Nat Commun 7:13177. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms13177
Jones PA (2012) Functions of DNA methylation: islands, start sites, gene bodies and beyond. Nat Rev Genet 13:484–492. https://doi.org/10.1038/nrg3230
Kinde B, Wu DY, Greenberg ME, Gabel HW (2016) DNA methylation in the gene body influences MeCP2-mediated gene repression. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 113:15114–15119. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1618737114
Klank RL, Decker Grunke SA, Bangasser BL, Forster CL, Price MA, Odde TJ, SantaCruz KS, Rosenfeld SS, Canoll P, Turley EA et al (2017) Biphasic dependence of glioma survival and cell migration on CD44 expression level. Cell Rep 18:23–31. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2016.12.024
Kraus TF, Globisch D, Wagner M, Eigenbrod S, Widmann D, Munzel M, Muller M, Pfaffeneder T, Hackner B, Feiden W et al (2012) Low values of 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC), the “sixth base,” are associated with anaplasia in human brain tumors. Int J Cancer 131:1577–1590. https://doi.org/10.1002/ijc.27429
Kraus TF, Kolck G, Greiner A, Schierl K, Guibourt V, Kretzschmar HA (2015) Loss of 5-hydroxymethylation and intratumoral heterogeneity as an epigenetic hallmark of glioblastoma. Tumor Biol 36:8439–8446. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13277-015-3606-9)
Lasorella A, Benezra R, Iavarone A (2014) The ID proteins: master regulators of cancer stem cells and tumour aggressiveness. Nat Rev Cancer 14:77–91. https://doi.org/10.1038/nrc3638
Lian CG, Xu Y, Ceol C, Wu F, Larson A, Dresser K, Xu W, Tan L, Hu Y, Zhan Q et al (2012) Loss of 5-hydroxymethylcytosine is an epigenetic hallmark of melanoma. Cell 150:1135–1146. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2012.07.033
Lin B, Madan A, Yoon JG, Fang X, Yan X, Kim TK, Hwang D, Hood L, Foltz G (2010) Massively parallel signature sequencing and bioinformatics analysis identifies up-regulation of TGFBI and SOX4 in human glioblastoma. PLoS One 5:e10210. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0010210
Lisanti S, von Zglinicki T, Mathers JC (2012) Standardization and quality controls for the methylated DNA immunoprecipitation technique. Epigenetics 7:615–625. https://doi.org/10.4161/epi.20028
Lister R, Mukamel E, Nery J, Urich M, Puddifoot C, Johnson N, Lucero J, Huang Y, Dwork A, Schultz M et al (2013) Global epigenomic reconfiguration during mammalian brain development. Science 341:1237905
Liu Y, Jiang W, Liu J, Zhao S, Xiong J, Mao Y, Wang Y (2012) IDH1 mutations inhibit multiple alpha-ketoglutarate-dependent dioxygenase activities in astroglioma. J Neurooncol 109:253–260. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11060-012-0914-4)
Lou S, Lee H, Qin H, Li J, Gao Z, Liu X, Chan L, Lam V, So W, Wang Y et al (2014) Whole-genome bisulfite sequencing of multiple individuals reveals complementary roles of promoter and gene body methylation in transcriptional regulation. Genome Biol 15:408
Lunnon K, Hannon E, Smith RG, Dempster E, Wong C, Burrage J, Troakes C, Al-Sarraj S, Kepa A, Schalkwyk L et al (2016) Variation in 5-hydroxymethylcytosine across human cortex and cerebellum. Genome Biol 17:27. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13059-016-0871-x
Ma Y, Tang N, Thompson RC, Mobley BC, Clark SW, Sarkaria JN, Wang J (2016) InsR/IGF1R pathway mediates resistance to EGFR inhibitors in glioblastoma. Clin Cancer Res 22:1767–1776. https://doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-15-1677
Ma Y, Wang P, Xue Y, Qu C, Zheng J, Liu X, Ma J, Liu Y (2017) PVT1 affects growth of glioma microvascular endothelial cells by negatively regulating miR-186. Tumor Biol 39:1–18
Mao XG, Song SJ, Xue XY, Yan M, Wang L, Lin W, Guo G, Zhang X (2013) LGR5 is a proneural factor and is regulated by OLIG2 in glioma stem-like Cells. Cell Mol Neurobiol 33:851–865. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10571-013-9951-6)
Miao J, Jiang Y, Wang D, Zhou J, Fan C, Jiao F, Liu B, Zhang J, Wang Y, Zhang Q (2015) Trichosanthin suppresses the proliferation of glioma cells by inhibiting LGR5 expression and the Wnt/beta-catenin signaling pathway. Oncol Rep 34:2845–2852. https://doi.org/10.3892/or.2015.4290
Mootha VK, Lindgen CM, Eriksson K, Subramanian A, Sihag S, Lehar J, Puigserver P, Carlsson E, Ridderstrale M, Laurila E et al (2003) PGC-1a responsive genes involved in oxidative phosphorylation are coordinately downregulated in human diabetes. Nat Genet 34:267–273
Morris TJ, Butcher LM, Feber A, Teschendorff AE, Chakravarthy AR, Wojdacz TK, Beck S (2014) ChAMP: 450 k chip analysis methylation pipeline. Bioinformatics 30:428–430. https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btt684
Muller T, Gessi M, Waha A, Isselstein LJ, Luxen D, Freihoff D, Freihoff J, Becker A, Simon M, Hammes J et al (2012) Nuclear exclusion of TET1 is associated with loss of 5-hydroxymethylcytosine in IDH1 wild-type gliomas. Am J Pathol 181:675–683. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajpath.2012.04.017
Nakata S, Campos B, Bageritz J, Bermejo JL, Becker N, Engel F, Acker T, Momma S, Herold-Mende C, Lichter P et al (2013) LGR5 is a marker of poor prognosis in glioblastoma and is required for survival of brain cancer stem-like cells. Brain Pathol 23:60–72. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1750-3639.2012.00618.x
Nazarenko I, Hede SM, He X, Hedren A, Thompson J, Lindstrom MS, Nister M (2012) PDGF and PDGF receptors in glioma. Ups J Med Sci 117:99–112. https://doi.org/10.3109/03009734.2012.665097
Nestor CE, Ottaviano R, Reddington J, Sproul D, Reinhardt D, Dunican D, Katz E, Dixon JM, Harrison DJ, Meehan RR (2012) Tissue type is a major modifier of the 5-hydroxymethylcytosine content of human genes. Genome Res 22:467–477. https://doi.org/10.1101/gr.126417.111
Noushmehr H, Weisenberger DJ, Diefes K, Phillips HS, Pujara K, Berman BP, Pan F, Pelloski CE, Sulman EP, Bhat KP et al (2010) Identification of a CpG island methylator phenotype that defines a distinct subgroup of glioma. Cancer Cell 17:510–522. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ccr.2010.03.017
Orr BA, Haffner MC, Nelson WG, Yegnasubramanian S, Eberhart CG (2012) Decreased 5-hydroxymethylcytosine is associated with neural progenitor phenotype in normal brain and shorter survival in malignant glioma. PLoS One 7:e41036. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0041036
Parsons DW, Jones S, Zhang X, Lin JC, Leary RJ, Angenendt P, Mankoo P, Carter H, Siu IM, Gallia GL et al (2008) An integrated genomic analysis of human glioblastoma multiforme. Science 321:1807–1812. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1164382
Penuelas S, Anido J, Prieto-Sanchez RM, Folch G, Barba I, Cuartas I, Garcia-Dorado D, Poca MA, Sahuquillo J, Baselga J et al (2009) TGF-beta increases glioma-initiating cell self-renewal through the induction of LIF in human glioblastoma. Cancer Cell 15:315–327. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ccr.2009.02.011
Senbabaoglu Y, Michailidis G, Li JZ (2014) Critical limitations of consensus clustering in class discovery. Sci Rep 4:6207. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep06207
Sérandour AA, Avner S, Oger F, Bizot M, Percevault F, Lucchetti-Miganeh C, Palierne G, Gheeraert C, Barloy-Hubler F, Péron CL et al (2012) Dynamic hydroxymethylation of deoxyribonucleic acid marks differentiation-associated enhancers. Nucleic Acids Res 40:8255–8265. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gks595
Speranza MC, Frattini V, Pisati F, Kapetis D, Porrati P, Eoli M, Pellegatta S, Finocchiaro G (2012) NEDD9, a novel target of miR-145, increases the invasiveness of glioblastoma. Oncotarget 3:723–734
Spruijt CG, Gnerlich F, Smits AH, Pfaffeneder T, Jansen PW, Bauer C, Munzel M, Wagner M, Muller M, Khan F et al (2013) Dynamic readers for 5-(hydroxy)methylcytosine and its oxidized derivatives. Cell 152:1146–1159. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2013.02.004
Stewart SK, Morris TJ, Guilhamon P, Bulstrode H, Bachman M, Balasubramanian S, Beck S (2015) oxBS-450 K: a method for analysing hydroxymethylation using 450 K BeadChips. Methods 72:9–15. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ymeth.2014.08.009
Stupp R, Mason WP, van den Bent MJ, Weller M, Fisher B, Taphoorn MJ, Belanger K, Brandes AA, Marosi C, Bogdahn U et al (2005) Radiotherapy plus concomitant and adjuvant temozolomide for glioblastoma. N Engl J Med 352:987–996
Subramanian A, Tamayo P, Mootha VK, Mukherjee S, Ebert BL, Gillette MA, Paulovich A, Pomeroy SL, Golub T, Lander ES et al (2005) Gene set enrichment analysis: a knowledge-based approach for interpreting genome-wide expression profiles. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 102:115550–155545
Sugiyama M, Hasegawa H, Ito S, Sugiyama K, Maeda M, Aoki K, Wakabayashi T, Hamaguchi M, Natsume A, Senga T (2015) Paired related homeobox 1 is associated with the invasive properties of glioblastoma cells. Oncol Rep 33:1123–1130. https://doi.org/10.3892/or.2014.3681
Sun LH, Yang FQ, Zhang CB, Wu YP, Liang JS, Jin S, Wang Z, Wang HJ, Bao ZS, Yang ZX et al (2017) Overexpression of paxillin correlates with tumor progression and predicts poor survival in glioblastoma. CNS Neurosci Ther 23:69–75. https://doi.org/10.1111/cns.12606
Suva ML, Rheinbay E, Gillespie SM, Patel AP, Wakimoto H, Rabkin SD, Riggi N, Chi AS, Cahill DP, Nahed BV et al (2014) Reconstructing and reprogramming the tumor-propagating potential of glioblastoma stem-like cells. Cell 157:580–594. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2014.02.030
Tahiliani M, Koh KP, Shen Y, Pastor WA, Bandukwala H, Brudno Y, Agarwal S, Iyer LM, Liu DR, Aravind L et al (2009) Conversion of 5-methylcytosine to 5-hydroxymethylcytosine in mammalian DNA by MLL partner TET1. Science 324:930–935. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1170116
Takai H, Masuda K, Sato T, Sakaguchi Y, Suzuki T, Suzuki T, Koyama-Nasu R, Nasu-Nishimura Y, Katou Y, Ogawa H et al (2014) 5-Hydroxymethylcytosine plays a critical role in glioblastomagenesis by recruiting the CHTOP-methylosome complex. Cell Rep 9:48–60. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2014.08.071
Turcan S, Rohle D, Goenka A, Walsh LA, Fang F, Yilmaz E, Campos C, Fabius AW, Lu C, Ward PS et al (2012) IDH1 mutation is sufficient to establish the glioma hypermethylator phenotype. Nature 483:479–483. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature10866
Varley KE, Gertz J, Bowling KM, Parker SL, Reddy TE, Pauli-Behn F, Cross MK, Williams BA, Stamatoyannopoulos JA, Crawford GE et al (2013) Dynamic DNA methylation across diverse human cell lines and tissues. Genome Res 23:555–567. https://doi.org/10.1101/gr.147942.112
Verhaak RG, Hoadley KA, Purdom E, Wang V, Qi Y, Wilkerson MD, Miller CR, Ding L, Golub T, Mesirov JP et al (2010) Integrated genomic analysis identifies clinically relevant subtypes of glioblastoma characterized by abnormalities in PDGFRA, IDH1, EGFR, and NF1. Cancer Cell 17:98–110. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ccr.2009.12.020
Vouri M, Croucher DR, Kennedy SP, An Q, Pilkington GJ, Hafizi S (2016) Axl-EGFR receptor tyrosine kinase hetero-interaction provides EGFR with access to pro-invasive signalling in cancer cells. Oncogenesis 5:e266. https://doi.org/10.1038/oncsis.2016.66
Wang D, Zhou J, Fan C, Jiao F, Liu B, Sun P, Miao J, Zhang Q (2014) Knockdown of LGR5 suppresses the proliferation of glioma cells in vitro and in vivo. Oncol Rep 31:41–49. https://doi.org/10.3892/or.2013.2826
Wen L, Li X, Yan L, Tan Y, Li R, Zhao Y, Wang Y, Xie J, Zhang Y, Song C et al (2014) Whole-genome analysis of 5-hydroxymethylcytosine and 5-methylcytosine at base resolution in the human brain. Genome Biol 15:R49. https://doi.org/10.1186/gb-2014-15-3-r49
Xu H, Chen Y, Tan C, Xu T, Yongyan Qin R, Huang Q, Lu C, Liang C, Lu Y et al (2016) High expression of WDR1 in primary glioblastoma is associated with poor prognosis. Am J Transl Res 8:1253–1264
Xu W, Yang H, Liu Y, Yang Y, Wang P, Kim SH, Ito S, Yang C, Wang P, Xiao MT et al (2011) Oncometabolite 2-hydroxyglutarate is a competitive inhibitor of alpha-ketoglutarate-dependent dioxygenases. Cancer Cell 19:17–30. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ccr.2010.12.014
Yan H, Parsons DW, Jin G, McLendon R, Rasheed BA, Yuan W, Kos I, Batinic-Haberle I, Jones S, Riggins GJ et al (2009) IDH1 and IDH2 mutations in gliomas. N Engl J Med 360:765–773
Yang X, Han H, De Carvalho DD, Lay FD, Jones PA, Liang G (2014) Gene body methylation can alter gene expression and is a therapeutic target in cancer. Cancer Cell 26:577–590. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ccr.2014.07.028
Zhang F, Liu Y, Zhang Z, Li J, Wan Y, Zhang L, Wang Y, Li X, Xu Y, Fu X et al (2016) 5-hydroxymethylcytosine loss is associated with poor prognosis for patients with WHO grade II diffuse astrocytomas. Sci Rep 6:20882. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep20882
Zhang J, Xu K, Shi L, Zhang L, Zhao Z, Xu H, Liang F, Li H, Zhao Y, Xu X et al (2017) Overexpression of MicroRNA-216a suppresses proliferation, migration, and invasion of glioma cells by targeting leucine-rich repeat-containing G protein-coupled receptor 5. Oncol Res. https://doi.org/10.3727/096504017x14874323871217
Acknowledgements
This research was supported by funds from the Canadian Cancer Society (Grant 703486) and The Adam Coules Research Grant Award (Patient and Family Advisory Committee of the Gerry and Nancy Pencer Brain Tumor Centre, Toronto). Dr. Kongkham received additional seed funding support from the Division of Neurosurgery and Department of Surgery (University Health Network, Toronto), and philanthropic support through the Ilan Levy Brain Tumour Research Fund.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
Wioletta Glowacka was responsible for BS and OxBS sample conversion, sample preparation for Illumina array analyses, gene expression analyses, data analysis and figure preparation for this manuscript. Harshika Jain was responsible for BS and OxBS sample conversion, sample preparation for Illumina array analyses, gene expression analyses, and assisted with downstream informatics analyses. Makiko Okura assisted with Illumina methylation/hydroxymethylation analyses and hMeDIP validation studies. Abulizi Maimaitiming, Yasin Mamatjan, and Hamza Farooq all contributed to bioinformatic analyses. Romina Nejad processed all samples for DNA and RNA isolation. Michael Taylor and Kenneth Aldape provided intellectual input into study design, manuscript review, as well as supported bioinformatic analyses through their individual laboratory personnel. Paul Kongkham was responsible for overall study design, study supervision, data analyses and manuscript preparation.
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Conflict of interest
The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.
Electronic supplementary material
Below is the link to the electronic supplementary material.
401_2018_1821_MOESM2_ESM.eps
Supplementary material 2 (EPS 3480 kb) Suppl. Figure 1 (Online Resource 2) 5hmC β-values compared with OxyBS package a) Correlation between probe level 5hmC β-values between our analysis (BS-OxBS) versus OxyBS R package for IDH1 mutant tumors. b) Correlation between probe level 5hmC β-values between our analysis (BS-OxBS) versus OxyBS R package for IDH1 wild-type tumors. c) Venn diagram depicting overlap between top 1% probes identified by our analysis (BS-OxBS) versus OxyBS R package for IDH1 mutant tumors. d) Venn diagram depicting overlap between top 1% probes identified by our analysis (BS-OxBS) versus OxyBS R package for IDH1 wild-type tumors
401_2018_1821_MOESM3_ESM.eps
Supplementary material 3 (EPS 2177 kb) Suppl. Figure 2 (Online Resource 3) Representative Chromatograms for IDH1 and IDH2 Sequencing a) Examples of representative chromatograms depicting IDH1 wild-type (“IDH1 normal”), as well as two IDH1 mutant variants (“IDH1 R132H mutant” and “IDH1 R132C mutant”). b) A representative chromatogram depicting IDH2 wild-type (“IDH2 normal”) sequencing
401_2018_1821_MOESM5_ESM.eps
Supplementary material 5 (EPS 2574 kb) Suppl. Figure 3 (Online Resource 5) Genomic abundance of 5hmC and 5mC, and distribution related to CpG island features, in IDH1 mutant and wild-type high-grade gliomas a) Cumulative density plot across all probes for 5hmC β-values for IDH1 mutant (IDH1 mt) versus IDH1 wild-type (IDH1 wt) tumors. b) cumulative density plot across all probes for 5mC β-values for IDH1 mt versus IDH1 wt tumors. c) and d) Cumulative density plots for 5mC β-values stratified by CpG island feature, demonstrating overall reduced CpG island 5mC and greater 5mC content targeting CpG island shores and shelves for IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt tumors, respectively. e) and f) Cumulative density plots for 5hmC β-values stratified by CpG island feature, demonstrating overall reduced CpG island 5hmC and slightly greater 5hmC content targeting CpG island shores and shelves for IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt tumors, respectively
401_2018_1821_MOESM7_ESM.eps
Supplementary material 7 (EPS 2574 kb) Suppl. Figure 4 (Online Resource 7) Distribution of top 1% 5hmC and 5mC probes, and DHMR probes, stratified by CpG island feature and genomic regions. a) Distribution of top 1% 5hmC probes stratified by CpG island features, expressed as percentage of total number of top 1% 5hmC probes. b) Distribution of top 1% 5mC probes stratified by CpG island features. c) Distribution of top 1% 5hmC probes stratified by genomic regions as annotated by Goldmine, expressed as percentage of total number of top 1% 5hmC probes. d) Distribution of top 1% 5mC probes stratified by genomic regions. e) Distribution of DHMR probes in relation to CpG island features. f) Distribution of DHMR probes in relation to genomic regions
401_2018_1821_MOESM9_ESM.eps
Supplementary material 9 (EPS 2878 kb) Suppl. Figure 5 (Online Resource 9) Pathway analysis for top 1% and DHMR probe targets a) Venn diagram depicting the degree of overlap versus unique probes among the top 1% 5hmC probes in IDH1 mutant and IDH1 wild-type tumors. b) Pathway analysis for top 1% 5hmC probe targets. Unique and common pathways identified among the top 10 pathways for each of IDH1 mutant and IDH1 wild-type tumors are listed, along with the number of matching genes observed for each pathway. c) Pathway analysis for differentially hydroxymethylated region (DHMR) 5hmC probe targets
401_2018_1821_MOESM11_ESM.eps
Supplementary material 11 (EPS 2179 kb) Suppl. Figure 6 (Online Resource 11) Enhancer targeting based on primary human GBM tumor propagating cell line enhancer annotations. Additional data demonstrating ORs for enhancer targeting of DHMR probes as well as top 1% probes (all tumors, IDH1 mt, IDH1 wt) based on enhancer annotations from H3K27Ac ChIP-seq data on the a) MGG4 and b) MGG8 tumor propagating lines
401_2018_1821_MOESM13_ESM.eps
Supplementary material 13 (EPS 2286 kb) Suppl. Figure 7 (Online Resource 13) 5hmC-based clustering identifies co-segregation of a subset of IDH1 mutant and wild-type tumors. Consensus clustering based on 5hmC β-values for overlapping DHMR and top 1% probes (n = 321) demonstrates 3 robust clusters. Cluster 1 consists solely of IDH1 mt tumors, while cluster 3 consists of IDH1 wt tumors. Cluster 2 is mixed with both IDH1 mt and wt tumors. WHO grade III/IV represents tumors classified pathologically as “high-grade glioma”
401_2018_1821_MOESM14_ESM.eps
Supplementary material 14 (EPS 2352 kb) Suppl. Figure 8 (Online Resource 14) 5hmC Consensus clustering CDF and silhouette plots. a) Consensus CDF and b) silhouette plots, demonstrating stability of 3 cluster groups resulting from consensus clustering for all samples based on 5hmC β-values. For comparison, results for 2 cluster membership are depicted in c) and d) demonstrating less robust cluster membership
401_2018_1821_MOESM18_ESM.eps
Supplementary material 18 (EPS 3374 kb) Suppl. Figure 9 (Online Resource 18) 5hmC versus gene expression by gene region. a) Notched box plot depicting IDH1 mt top 1% probe correlation with annotated target gene expression, stratified by probe gene region. b) Notched box plot depicting IDH1 wt top 1% probe correlation with annotated target gene expression, stratified by probe gene region. c) Distribution of top 1% probes demonstrating a significant Spearman correlation with genes differentially expressed between IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt tumors, divided by gene region
401_2018_1821_MOESM21_ESM.eps
Supplementary material 21 (EPS 1306 kb) Suppl. Figure 10 (Online Resource 21) LGR5 gene expression correlates with hydroxymethylation. a) Significant strong positive Spearman correlation between 5hmC β-values and gene expression for candidate gene LGR5 (probe ID cg23900866). b) Non-significant Spearman correlation between 5mC β-values and gene expression for the same probe
401_2018_1821_MOESM23_ESM.eps
Supplementary material 23 (EPS 2028 kb) Suppl. Figure 11 (Online Resource 23) hMeDIP-PCR validation of select gene candidates. hMeDIP-PCR was performed on an expanded cohort of IDH1 mt (n = 25) and IDH1 wt (n = 16) tumors, for gene candidates demonstrating significant positive Spearman correlation with gene expression, for genes differentially expressed between IDH1 mt and IDH1 wt tumors. For each candidate, 5hmC was increased among the IDH1 mt tumor cohort based on Illumina MethylationEPIC array data. Primers flanking the respective Illumina probe loci were used for PCR amplification. Enrichment following hMeDIP is demonstrated among the IDH1 mt cohort for a) LGR5, b) WDR11-AS1, c) CRTAC1, d) GRID1, and e) FAM155A
Rights and permissions
Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.
About this article
Cite this article
Glowacka, W.K., Jain, H., Okura, M. et al. 5-Hydroxymethylcytosine preferentially targets genes upregulated in isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 mutant high-grade glioma. Acta Neuropathol 135, 617–634 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00401-018-1821-3
Received:
Revised:
Accepted:
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00401-018-1821-3