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Region-specific DNA hydroxymethylation along the malignant progression of IDH-mutant gliomas.

Cancer Science 2024 March 4
The majority of low-grade isocitrate dehydrogenase-mutant (IDHmt ) gliomas undergo malignant progression (MP), but their underlying mechanism remains unclear. IDHmt gliomas exhibit global DNA methylation, and our previous report suggested that MP could be partly attributed to passive demethylation caused by accelerated cell cycles. However, during MP, there is also active demethylation mediated by ten-eleven translocation, such as DNA hydroxymethylation. Hydroxymethylation is reported to potentially contribute to gene expression regulation, but its role in MP remains under investigation. Therefore, we conducted a comprehensive analysis of hydroxymethylation during MP of IDHmt astrocytoma. Five primary/malignantly progressed IDHmt astrocytoma pairs were analyzed with oxidative bisulfite and the Infinium EPIC methylation array, detecting 5-hydroxymethyl cytosine at over 850,000 locations for region-specific hydroxymethylation assessment. Notably, we observed significant sharing of hydroxymethylated genomic regions during MP across the samples. Hydroxymethylated CpGs were enriched in open sea and intergenic regions (p < 0.001), and genes undergoing hydroxymethylation were significantly associated with cancer-related signaling pathways. RNA sequencing data integration identified 91 genes with significant positive/negative hydroxymethylation-expression correlations. Functional analysis suggested that positively correlated genes are involved in cell-cycle promotion, while negatively correlated ones are associated with antineoplastic functions. Analyses of The Cancer Genome Atlas clinical data on glioma were in line with these findings. Motif-enrichment analysis suggested the potential involvement of the transcription factor KLF4 in hydroxymethylation-based gene regulation. Our findings shed light on the significance of region-specific DNA hydroxymethylation in glioma MP and suggest its potential role in cancer-related gene expression and IDHmt glioma malignancy.

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