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Genome-scale DNA methylation maps of pluripotent and differentiated cells

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TLDR
Low-throughput reduced representation bisulphite sequencing is established as a powerful technology for epigenetic profiling of cell populations relevant to developmental biology, cancer and regenerative medicine.
Abstract
DNA methylation is essential for normal development and has been implicated in many pathologies including cancer. Our knowledge about the genome-wide distribution of DNA methylation, how it changes during cellular differentiation and how it relates to histone methylation and other chromatin modifications in mammals remains limited. Here we report the generation and analysis of genome-scale DNA methylation profiles at nucleotide resolution in mammalian cells. Using high-throughput reduced representation bisulphite sequencing and single-molecule-based sequencing, we generated DNA methylation maps covering most CpG islands, and a representative sampling of conserved non-coding elements, transposons and other genomic features, for mouse embryonic stem cells, embryonic-stem-cell-derived and primary neural cells, and eight other primary tissues. Several key findings emerge from the data. First, DNA methylation patterns are better correlated with histone methylation patterns than with the underlying genome sequence context. Second, methylation of CpGs are dynamic epigenetic marks that undergo extensive changes during cellular differentiation, particularly in regulatory regions outside of core promoters. Third, analysis of embryonic-stem-cell-derived and primary cells reveals that 'weak' CpG islands associated with a specific set of developmentally regulated genes undergo aberrant hypermethylation during extended proliferation in vitro, in a pattern reminiscent of that reported in some primary tumours. More generally, the results establish reduced representation bisulphite sequencing as a powerful technology for epigenetic profiling of cell populations relevant to developmental biology, cancer and regenerative medicine.

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DNA methylation in neurodegenerative disorders: a missing link between genome and environment?

TL;DR: DNA methylation in neurodegenerative disorders is a missing link between genome and environment and could be a cause for concern in future studies.
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Next-generation sequencing applied to molecular diagnostics

TL;DR: The contribution of next-generation sequencing technologies to diagnosis and cancer prognostication and prediction and a great degree of bioinformatic expertise is focused on.
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LncRNA-mediated DNA methylation: an emerging mechanism in cancer and beyond

TL;DR: An overview of the current understanding of long non-coding RNA-mediated DNA methylation, with emphasis on the roles of this mechanism in cancer, has not been systematically summarized as discussed by the authors .
Journal ArticleDOI

Primers on nutrigenetics and nutri(epi)genomics: Origins and development of precision nutrition.

TL;DR: How nutrigenetics andnutrigenomics modulate health, promoting or affecting healthiness through life-style, thus playing a pivotal role in modulating the effect of genetic predispositions is described.

Estrogen induces global reorganization of chromatin structure in human breast cancer cells

TL;DR: The role of a hormone - estrogen - on genome organization, and its effect on gene regulation in cancer, is revealed through genome-wide mapping of chromatin interactions (Hi-C) over the time after estrogen stimulation of breast cancer cells.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

DNA methylation patterns and epigenetic memory

TL;DR: The heritability of methylation states and the secondary nature of the decision to invite or exclude methylation support the idea that DNA methylation is adapted for a specific cellular memory function in development.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Bivalent Chromatin Structure Marks Key Developmental Genes in Embryonic Stem Cells

TL;DR: It is proposed that bivalent domains silence developmental genes in ES cells while keeping them poised for activation, highlighting the importance of DNA sequence in defining the initial epigenetic landscape and suggesting a novel chromatin-based mechanism for maintaining pluripotency.
Journal ArticleDOI

The epigenomics of cancer.

TL;DR: Recent advances in understanding how epigenetic alterations participate in the earliest stages of neoplasia, including stem/precursor cell contributions, are reviewed and the growing implications of these advances for strategies to control cancer are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Distinct and predictive chromatin signatures of transcriptional promoters and enhancers in the human genome.

TL;DR: Insight is given into the connections between chromatin modifications and transcriptional regulatory activity and a novel functional enhancer for the carnitine transporter SLC22A5 (OCTN2) is uncovered, providing a new tool for the functional annotation of the human genome.
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