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Aberration in DNA Methylation in B-Cell Lymphomas Has a Complex Origin and Increases with Disease Severity
Author(s) -
Subhajyoti De,
Rita Shaknovich,
Markus Riester,
Olivier Elemento,
Huimin Geng,
Matthías Kormáksson,
Yanwen Jiang,
Bruce W. Woolcock,
Nathalie A. Johnson,
José M. Polo,
Leandro Cerchietti,
Randy D. Gascoyne,
Ari Melnick,
Franziska Michor
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
plos genetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.587
H-Index - 233
eISSN - 1553-7404
pISSN - 1553-7390
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pgen.1003137
Subject(s) - biology , epigenetics , dna methylation , methylation , genetics , promoter , epigenetics of physical exercise , gene , ctcf , cancer research , lymphoma , gene expression , enhancer , immunology
Despite mounting evidence that epigenetic abnormalities play a key role in cancer biology, their contributions to the malignant phenotype remain poorly understood. Here we studied genome-wide DNA methylation in normal B-cell populations and subtypes of B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma: follicular lymphoma and diffuse large B-cell lymphomas. These lymphomas display striking and progressive intra-tumor heterogeneity and also inter-patient heterogeneity in their cytosine methylation patterns. Epigenetic heterogeneity is initiated in normal germinal center B-cells, increases markedly with disease aggressiveness, and is associated with unfavorable clinical outcome. Moreover, patterns of abnormal methylation vary depending upon chromosomal regions, gene density and the status of neighboring genes. DNA methylation abnormalities arise via two distinct processes: i) lymphomagenic transcriptional regulators perturb promoter DNA methylation in a target gene-specific manner, and ii) aberrant epigenetic states tend to spread to neighboring promoters in the absence of CTCF insulator binding sites.

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