Abstract

BackgroundThe quantification of global DNA methylation has been established in epigenetic screening. As more practicable alternatives to the HPLC-based gold standard, the methylation analysis of CpG islands in repeatable elements (LINE-1) and the luminometric methylation assay (LUMA) of overall 5-methylcytosine content in “CCGG” recognition sites are most widely used. Both methods are applied as virtually equivalent, despite the hints that their results only partly agree. This triggered the present agreement assessments.ResultsThree different human cell types (cultured MCF7 and SHSY5Y cell lines treated with different chemical modulators of DNA methylation and whole blood drawn from pain patients and healthy volunteers) were submitted to the global DNA methylation assays employing LINE-1 or LUMA-based pyrosequencing measurements. The agreement between the two bioassays was assessed using generally accepted approaches to the statistics for laboratory method comparison studies. Although global DNA methylation levels measured by the two methods correlated, five different lines of statistical evidence consistently rejected the assumption of complete agreement. Specifically, a bias was observed between the two methods. In addition, both the magnitude and direction of bias were tissue-dependent. Interassay differences could be grouped based on Bayesian statistics, and these groups allowed in turn to re-identify the originating tissue.ConclusionsAlthough providing partly correlated measurements of DNA methylation, interchangeability of the quantitative results obtained with LINE-1 and LUMA was jeopardized by a consistent bias between the results. Moreover, the present analyses strongly indicate a tissue specificity of the differences between the two methods.

Highlights

  • The quantification of global DNA methylation has been established in epigenetic screening

  • Study design and subjects The two different global DNA methylation markers (LINE-1 pyrosequencing, luminometric methylation assay (LUMA)) were assessed in three independent sample sets that were generated (i) in vitro from human cell lines (MCF7 and SHSY5Y) or (ii) whole blood samples acquired from healthy volunteers or (iii) pain patients

  • Five applied methods were consistent with finding a disagreement between the magnitudes of DNA methylation measured with the long interspersed nuclear element 1 (LINE-1) or the LUMA method (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

The quantification of global DNA methylation has been established in epigenetic screening. Drugs may interfere with epigenetics [8] including all classical mechanisms such as histone modifications, DNA methylation [9, 10], and further regulatory processes of gene expression [11, 12]. This interference can be intended as with epigenetic therapeutics or unintended as common drugs may exert epigenetic (side) effects [8]. Quantification of epigenetic modulations has manifold applications [14]

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