Abstract

Abstract BACKGROUND Adult diffuse glioma is a heterogenous brain tumor group that has malignant potential and recurring properties. Glioma CpG island methylator phenotype (G-CIMP) associated with chromatin remodeling encompasses two different methylation degrees: G-CIMP-high and G-CIMP-low that have high levels of DNA methylation and loss of DNA methylation, respectively. G-CIMP-high confers a more favorable prognosis and better predictive values by altering transcriptional dynamics and the gene expression. METHODS We have performed Chromatin Immunoprecipitation Sequencing (ChIP-Seq) on DNA extracted from fresh frozen primary tumor tissues (G-CIMP-high and G-CIMP-low). We have processed the sequencing data by using FastQC (v.:0.11.5), bwa-mem (v.:0.7.15) and picard tool (v.:2.7.1). The ChIP-seq peaks and the differentially bound peaks were obtained using MACS2 (v.:2.1.1) and DiffBind (v.:3.4.11), respectively. We have also integrated transcriptomic, epigenomic and genomic data. RESULTS Initial results showed that the differentially bound H3K27ac and H3K4me3 peak gains and losses are located mainly in intronic and intergenic regions. The integration between epigenetic and transcriptomic data revealed that the promoter of the HOXD13 gene upregulated in GCIMP-low presents an active regulatory region and is enriched by H3K27ac and H3K4me3 sites. We were able to identify that GCIMP-low, in addition to presenting more downregulated genes than GCIMP-high, also has greater affinity to the H3K27ac peaks. In GCIMP-low, we identified that regions enriched by H3K27ac are highly associated with the presence H3K4me3 marks. CONCLUSION We mapped the enrichment of histone modifications in the TSS of differentially expressed genes in G-CIMP-high and G-CIMP-low identifying both the susceptibility of GIMP-low to interact with H3K27ac and the fact that the progression of GCIMP-high to G-CIMP-low can be explained by the association between H3K27ac gain and gene downregulation. Also, we predicted the HOXD13 gene as a putative master epigenetic regulator of the G-CIMP demethylation process and, consequently, of tumor recurrence and progression, over time.

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