Allele-specific epigenome maps reveal sequence-dependent stochastic switching at regulatory loci

Vitor Onuchic(Baylor College of Medicine), Eugene Lurie(Baylor College of Medicine), Ivenise Carrero(Baylor College of Medicine), Piotr Pawliczek(Baylor College of Medicine), Ronak Y. Patel(Baylor College of Medicine), Joel Rozowsky(Yale University), Timur R. Galeev(Yale University), Zhuoyi Huang(Baylor College of Medicine), Robert C. Altshuler(Broad Institute), Zhizhuo Zhang(Broad Institute), R. Alan Harris(Baylor College of Medicine), Cristian Coarfa(Baylor College of Medicine), Lillian Ashmore(Baylor College of Medicine), Jéssica Wildgrube Bertól(The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston), Walid D. Fakhouri(The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston), Fuli Yu(Baylor College of Medicine), Manolis Kellis(Broad Institute), Mark Gerstein(Yale University), Aleksandar Milosavljevic(Baylor College of Medicine)
Science
August 23, 2018
Cited by 123Open Access
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Abstract

To assess the impact of genetic variation in regulatory loci on human health, we constructed a high-resolution map of allelic imbalances in DNA methylation, histone marks, and gene transcription in 71 epigenomes from 36 distinct cell and tissue types from 13 donors. Deep whole-genome bisulfite sequencing of 49 methylomes revealed sequence-dependent CpG methylation imbalances at thousands of heterozygous regulatory loci. Such loci are enriched for stochastic switching, which is defined as random transitions between fully methylated and unmethylated states of DNA. The methylation imbalances at thousands of loci are explainable by different relative frequencies of the methylated and unmethylated states for the two alleles. Further analyses provided a unifying model that links sequence-dependent allelic imbalances of the epigenome, stochastic switching at gene regulatory loci, and disease-associated genetic variation.


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