AI Article Synopsis

  • Differences in DNA collection methods can affect the outcome of epigenome-wide association studies (EWAS) by causing systematic biases in DNA methylation profiles of blood samples.
  • A study found that storing whole blood at 4°C for 24 hours significantly altered DNA methylation measurements compared to fresh samples, but adjusting for cell-type composition helped reduce this bias.
  • Comparing various sample collection protocols from different biobanks showed that biases in DNA methylation profiles could be mitigated when adjustments were made, emphasizing the importance of standardizing collection methods for accurate disease marker discovery.

Article Abstract

Differences in DNA collection protocols may be a potential confounder in epigenome-wide association studies (EWAS) using a large number of blood specimens from multiple biobanks and/or cohorts. Here we show that pre-analytical procedures involved in DNA collection can induce systematic bias in the DNA methylation profiles of blood cells that can be adjusted by cell-type composition variables. In Experiment 1, whole blood from 16 volunteers was collected to examine the effect of a 24 h storage period at 4°C on DNA methylation profiles as measured using the Infinium HumanMethylation450 BeadChip array. Our statistical analysis showed that the P-value distribution of more than 450,000 CpG sites was similar to the theoretical distribution (in quantile-quantile plot, λ = 1.03) when comparing two control replicates, which was remarkably deviated from the theoretical distribution (λ = 1.50) when comparing control and storage conditions. We then considered cell-type composition as a possible cause of the observed bias in DNA methylation profiles and found that the bias associated with the cold storage condition was largely decreased (λ adjusted = 1.14) by taking into account a cell-type composition variable. As such, we compared four respective sample collection protocols used in large-scale Japanese biobanks or cohorts as well as two control replicates. Systematic biases in DNA methylation profiles were observed between control and three of four protocols without adjustment of cell-type composition (λ = 1.12-1.45) and no remarkable biases were seen after adjusting for cell-type composition in all four protocols (λ adjusted = 1.00-1.17). These results revealed important implications for comparing DNA methylation profiles between blood specimens from different sources and may lead to discovery of disease-associated DNA methylation markers and the development of DNA methylation profile-based predictive risk models.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4723336PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0147519PLOS

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