Abstract

The study of Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA) methylation has allowed important advances in the understanding of genetic diseases related to abnormal cell behavior. DNA methylation analysis tools have become especially relevant in recent years. However, these tools have a high computational cost and some of them require the configuration of specific hardware and software, extending the time for research and diagnosis. In previous works, we proposed some tools for DNA methylation analysis and a new tool, called HPG-DHunter, for the detection and visualization of Differentially Methylated Regions (DMRs). Even though this tool offers a user-friendly interface, its installation and maintenance requires the information technology knowledge specified above. In this paper, we propose our tool as a web-based application, which allows biomedical researchers the use of a powerful tool for methylation analysis, even for those not specialized in the management of Graphics Processing Units (GPUs) and their related software. The performance evaluation results show that this web-based version of HPG-DHunter tool improves the response time offered to the user, also offering an improved interface and higher visualization quality, while showing the same efficiency in DMR identification than the standalone version.

Highlights

  • Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA) methylation is a representative mechanism of epigenetics

  • The second dataset was provided by the “Instituto de Investigación Sanitaria del Hospital Clínico de Valencia” (INCLIVA), from a medical study about the effects of DNA methylation in patients with Diabetes Mellitus 2 (DM2)

  • We have proposed the implementation of HPG-Dhunter [19] as a webbased application for identifying and visualizing Differentially Methylated Regions (DMRs) in the DNA coming from different samples

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Summary

Introduction

DNA methylation is a representative mechanism of epigenetics. DNA Methylation consists of the addition of a methyl group (CH3) to a cytosine, forming a 5mC link [1,2]. When this addition happens, that DNA position is methylated. DNA methylation inhibits the expression of certain genes by preventing the proteins responsible for DNA transcription to initiate this process [3]. It was originally proposed as a “silencing” epigenetic mark [4]

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