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Epigenetic regulation of placental gene expression in transcriptional subtypes of preeclampsia

Katherine Leavey, Samantha L. Wilson, Shannon Bainbridge, Wendy P. Robinson, Brian Cox

Clinical Epigenetics · 2018 · ▲ 93 citations

Abstract

Background: = 330), of which four (clusters 1, 2, 3, and 5) contained a substantial number of PE samples. However, while transcriptional analysis of placentas can subtype patients, we propose that the addition of epigenetic information could discern gene regulatory mechanisms behind the distinct PE pathologies, as well as identify clinically useful potential biomarkers. Results: We subjected 48 of our samples from transcriptional clusters 1, 2, 3, and 5 to Infinium HumanMethylation450 arrays. Samples belonging to transcriptional clusters 1-3 still showed visible relationships to each other by methylation, but cluster 5, with known chromosomal abnormalities, no longer formed a cohesive group. Within transcriptional clusters 2 and 3, controlling for fetal sex and gestational age in the identification of differentially methylated sites, compared to the healthier cluster 1, dramatically reduced the number of significant sites, but increased the percentage that demonstrated a strong linear correlation with gene expression (from 5% and 2% to 9% and 8%, respectively). Locations exhibiting a positive relationship between methylation and gene expression were most frequently found in CpG open sea enhancer regions within the gene body, while those with a significant negative correlation were often annotated to the promoter in a CpG shore region. Integrated transcriptome and epigenome analysis revealed modifications in TGF-beta signaling, cell adhesion, oxidative phosphorylation, and metabolism pathways in cluster 2 placentas, and aberrations in antigen presentation, allograft rejection, and cytokine-cytokine receptor interaction in cluster 3 samples. Conclusions: Overall, we have established DNA methylation alterations underlying a portion of the transcriptional development of "canonical" PE in cluster 2 and "immunological" PE in cluster 3. However, a significant number of the observed methylation changes were not associated with corresponding changes in gene expression, and vice versa, indicating that alternate methods of gene regulation will need to be explored to fully comprehend these PE subtypes.

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.1186/s13148-018-0463-6
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2026-06-03 MST

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APA
Leavey, K., Wilson, S.L., Bainbridge, S., Robinson, W.P., &amp; Cox, B. (2018). Epigenetic regulation of placental gene expression in transcriptional subtypes of preeclampsia. <em>Clinical Epigenetics</em>. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13148-018-0463-6
Vancouver
Leavey K, Wilson SL, Bainbridge S, Robinson WP, Cox B. Epigenetic regulation of placental gene expression in transcriptional subtypes of preeclampsia. Clinical Epigenetics. 2018. doi:10.1186/s13148-018-0463-6.
BibTeX
@article{katherine2018Epigen, title = {Epigenetic regulation of placental gene expression in transcriptional subtypes of preeclampsia}, author = {Katherine Leavey and Samantha L. Wilson and Shannon Bainbridge and Wendy P. Robinson and Brian Cox}, journal = {Clinical Epigenetics}, year = {2018}, doi = {10.1186/s13148-018-0463-6}, }

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