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GeMes, clusters of DNA methylation under genetic control, can inform genetic and epigenetic analysis of disease.


ABSTRACT: Epigenetic marks such as DNA methylation have generated great interest in the study of human disease. However, studies of DNA methylation have not established population-epigenetics principles to guide design, efficient statistics, or interpretation. Here, we show that the clustering of correlated DNA methylation at CpGs was similar to that of linkage-disequilibrium (LD) correlation in genetic SNP variation but for much shorter distances. Some clustering of methylated CpGs appeared to be genetically driven. Further, a set of correlated methylated CpGs related to a single SNP-based LD block was not always physically contiguous-segments of uncorrelated methylation as long as 300 kb could be interspersed in the cluster. Thus, we denoted these sets of correlated CpGs as GeMes, defined as potentially noncontiguous methylation clusters under the control of one or more methylation quantitative trait loci. This type of correlated methylation structure has implications for both biological functions of DNA methylation and for the design, analysis, and interpretation of epigenome-wide association studies.

SUBMITTER: Liu Y 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3980524 | biostudies-literature | 2014 Apr

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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GeMes, clusters of DNA methylation under genetic control, can inform genetic and epigenetic analysis of disease.

Liu Yun Y   Li Xin X   Aryee Martin J MJ   Ekström Tomas J TJ   Padyukov Leonid L   Klareskog Lars L   Vandiver Amy A   Moore Ann Zenobia AZ   Tanaka Toshiko T   Ferrucci Luigi L   Fallin M Daniele MD   Feinberg Andrew P AP  

American journal of human genetics 20140320 4


Epigenetic marks such as DNA methylation have generated great interest in the study of human disease. However, studies of DNA methylation have not established population-epigenetics principles to guide design, efficient statistics, or interpretation. Here, we show that the clustering of correlated DNA methylation at CpGs was similar to that of linkage-disequilibrium (LD) correlation in genetic SNP variation but for much shorter distances. Some clustering of methylated CpGs appeared to be genetic  ...[more]

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