Abstract

Simple SummaryThe role of DNA methylation in the carcinogenesis of colorectal cancer (CRC) diagnosed <50 years of age (early-onset CRC or EOCRC) is currently unknown. In this study, we investigated the genome-wide DNA methylation of 97 tumour and 54 normal colonic mucosa samples from people with EOCRC with the aim of identifying unique DNA methylation signatures and determining the role of ageing-related DNA methylation drift and age-acceleration in EOCRC aetiology. We found extensive DNA methylation alterations associated with EOCRC carcinogenesis, including a unique signature comprising 234 loci compared with CRCs from people >50 years of age. CpGs that undergo ageing-related methylation drift were significantly altered in EOCRC, and accelerated ageing was also evident in normal mucosa from people with EOCRC. Our study is the first study to identify unique DNA methylation changes in EOCRC, contributing novel information that may aid future efforts towards EOCRC prevention.We investigated aberrant DNA methylation (DNAm) changes and the contribution of ageing-associated methylomic drift and age acceleration to early-onset colorectal cancer (EOCRC) carcinogenesis. Genome-wide DNAm profiling using the Infinium HM450K on 97 EOCRC tumour and 54 normal colonic mucosa samples was compared with: (1) intermediate-onset CRC (IOCRC; diagnosed between 50–70 years; 343 tumour and 35 normal); and (2) late-onset CRC (LOCRC; >70 years; 318 tumour and 40 normal). CpGs associated with age-related methylation drift were identified using a public dataset of 231 normal mucosa samples from people without CRC. DNAm-age was estimated using epiTOC2. Common to all three age-of-onset groups, 88,385 (20% of all CpGs) CpGs were differentially methylated between tumour and normal mucosa. We identified 234 differentially methylated genes that were unique to the EOCRC group; 13 of these DMRs/genes were replicated in EOCRC compared with LOCRCs from TCGA. In normal mucosa from people without CRC, we identified 28,154 CpGs that undergo ageing-related DNAm drift, and of those, 65% were aberrantly methylated in EOCRC tumours. Based on the mitotic-based DNAm clock epiTOC2, we identified age acceleration in normal mucosa of people with EOCRC compared with normal mucosa from the IOCRC, LOCRC groups (p = 3.7 × 10−16) and young people without CRC (p = 5.8 × 10−6). EOCRC acquires unique DNAm alterations at 234 loci. CpGs associated with ageing-associated drift were widely affected in EOCRC without needing the decades-long accrual of DNAm drift as commonly seen in intermediate- and late-onset CRCs. Accelerated ageing in normal mucosa from people with EOCRC potentially underlies the earlier age of diagnosis in CRC carcinogenesis.

Highlights

  • Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most commonly diagnosed cancer and the second leading cause of cancer-related death worldwide [1]

  • We analysed genome-wide DNA methylation (DNAm) data from 758 CRC tumour and 129 histologically normal mucosa (NM) samples from 769 individuals stratified into early-onset colorectal cancer (EOCRC), intermediate-onset CRC (IOCRC), and late-onset CRC (LOCRC) subgroups (Table 1)

  • Utilising participants recruited via two well-characterised cohorts, we have generated genome-wide DNAm data for 769 non-hereditary, mismatch repair (MMR)-proficient CRCs, including 97 tumour samples from people with EOCRC

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Summary

Introduction

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most commonly diagnosed cancer and the second leading cause of cancer-related death worldwide [1]. Screening programs have been implemented for people starting at age 50 years in many countries, which has contributed to a reduction in CRC incidence in this older age group [2]. The incidence rate of CRC in people under 50 years of age has been increasing and accounts for over 10% of all CRC diagnoses in the US [3]. Monogenic cancer predisposition syndromes may explain up to 20% of all early-onset colorectal cancer (EOCRC) [4,5], it is unlikely to explain the increasing incidence of EOCRC. We do not know if EOCRC is molecularly distinct from later-onset CRC, a knowledge gap that hinders efforts to identify the cause/s of this increasing incidence

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