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Genome-scale analysis of aberrant DNA methylation in colorectal cancer

Toshinori Hinoue, Daniel J. Weisenberger, Christopher P.E. Lange, Hui Shen, Hyang‐Min Byun, David Van Den Berg, Simeen Malik, Fei Pan, Houtan Noushmehr, Cornelis M. van Dijk, Rob A.�E.�M. Tollenaar, Peter W. Laird

Genome Research · 2011 · ▲ 601 citations

Abstract

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a heterogeneous disease in which unique subtypes are characterized by distinct genetic and epigenetic alterations. Here we performed comprehensive genome-scale DNA methylation profiling of 125 colorectal tumors and 29 adjacent normal tissues. We identified four DNA methylation-based subgroups of CRC using model-based cluster analyses. Each subtype shows characteristic genetic and clinical features, indicating that they represent biologically distinct subgroups. A CIMP-high (CIMP-H) subgroup, which exhibits an exceptionally high frequency of cancer-specific DNA hypermethylation, is strongly associated with MLH1 DNA hypermethylation and the BRAF(V600E) mutation. A CIMP-low (CIMP-L) subgroup is enriched for KRAS mutations and characterized by DNA hypermethylation of a subset of CIMP-H-associated markers rather than a unique group of CpG islands. Non-CIMP tumors are separated into two distinct clusters. One non-CIMP subgroup is distinguished by a significantly higher frequency of TP53 mutations and frequent occurrence in the distal colon, while the tumors that belong to the fourth group exhibit a low frequency of both cancer-specific DNA hypermethylation and gene mutations and are significantly enriched for rectal tumors. Furthermore, we identified 112 genes that were down-regulated more than twofold in CIMP-H tumors together with promoter DNA hypermethylation. These represent ∼7% of genes that acquired promoter DNA methylation in CIMP-H tumors. Intriguingly, 48/112 genes were also transcriptionally down-regulated in non-CIMP subgroups, but this was not attributable to promoter DNA hypermethylation. Together, we identified four distinct DNA methylation subgroups of CRC and provided novel insight regarding the role of CIMP-specific DNA hypermethylation in gene silencing.

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.1101/gr.117523.110
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2026-06-12 MST

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APA
Hinoue, T., Weisenberger, D.J., Lange, C.P., Shen, H., Byun, H., Berg, D.V.D., Malik, S., Pan, F., Noushmehr, H., Dijk, C.M.V., Tollenaar, R.A., &amp; Laird, P.W. (2011). Genome-scale analysis of aberrant DNA methylation in colorectal cancer. <em>Genome Research</em>. https://doi.org/10.1101/gr.117523.110
Vancouver
Hinoue T, Weisenberger DJ, Lange CP, Shen H, Byun H, Berg DVD, et al. Genome-scale analysis of aberrant DNA methylation in colorectal cancer. Genome Research. 2011. doi:10.1101/gr.117523.110.
BibTeX
@article{toshinori2011Genome, title = {Genome-scale analysis of aberrant DNA methylation in colorectal cancer}, author = {Toshinori Hinoue and Daniel J. Weisenberger and Christopher P.E. Lange and Hui Shen and Hyang‐Min Byun and David Van Den Berg and Simeen Malik and Fei Pan and Houtan Noushmehr and Cornelis M. van Dijk and Rob A.�E.�M. Tollenaar and Peter W. Laird}, journal = {Genome Research}, year = {2011}, doi = {10.1101/gr.117523.110}, }

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