AI Article Synopsis

  • A comprehensive study investigates how genetic variations affect gene expression and epigenetic marks like DNA methylation and histone modifications across a large dataset of 910 samples.
  • About 32% of the tested DNA sites (CpGs) show genetic regulation, while 14% demonstrate potential epigenetic regulation, with specific regions such as enhancers and transcription start sites being highlighted.
  • The findings will enhance understanding of autoimmune diseases and provide valuable resources for future research on the interplay between genetics and epigenetics in the human genome.

Article Abstract

Background: The functional impact of genetic variation has been extensively surveyed, revealing that genetic changes correlated to phenotypes lie mostly in non-coding genomic regions. Studies have linked allele-specific genetic changes to gene expression, DNA methylation, and histone marks but these investigations have only been carried out in a limited set of samples.

Results: We describe a large-scale coordinated study of allelic and non-allelic effects on DNA methylation, histone mark deposition, and gene expression, detecting the interrelations between epigenetic and functional features at unprecedented resolution. We use information from whole genome and targeted bisulfite sequencing from 910 samples to perform genotype-dependent analyses of allele-specific methylation (ASM) and non-allelic methylation (mQTL). In addition, we introduce a novel genotype-independent test to detect methylation imbalance between chromosomes. Of the ~2.2 million CpGs tested for ASM, mQTL, and genotype-independent effects, we identify ~32% as being genetically regulated (ASM or mQTL) and ~14% as being putatively epigenetically regulated. We also show that epigenetically driven effects are strongly enriched in repressed regions and near transcription start sites, whereas the genetically regulated CpGs are enriched in enhancers. Known imprinted regions are enriched among epigenetically regulated loci, but we also observe several novel genomic regions (e.g., HOX genes) as being epigenetically regulated. Finally, we use our ASM datasets for functional interpretation of disease-associated loci and show the advantage of utilizing naïve T cells for understanding autoimmune diseases.

Conclusions: Our rich catalogue of haploid methylomes across multiple tissues will allow validation of epigenome association studies and exploration of new biological models for allelic exclusion in the human genome.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5346261PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13059-017-1173-7DOI Listing

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