DNA methylation loss promotes immune evasion of tumours with high mutation and copy number load

Hyunchul Jung(Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology), Hong Sook Kim(Samsung Medical Center), Jeong Yeon Kim(Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology), Jong‐Mu Sun(Samsung Medical Center), Jin Seok Ahn(Samsung Medical Center), Myung‐Ju Ahn(Samsung Medical Center), Keunchil Park(Samsung Medical Center), Manel Esteller(Institució Catalana de Recerca i Estudis Avançats), Se‐Hoon Lee(Samsung Medical Center), Jung Kyoon Choi(Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology)
Nature Communications
September 19, 2019
Cited by 557Open Access
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Abstract

Mitotic cell division increases tumour mutation burden and copy number load, predictive markers of the clinical benefit of immunotherapy. Cell division correlates also with genomic demethylation involving methylation loss in late-replicating partial methylation domains. Here we find that immunomodulatory pathway genes are concentrated in these domains and transcriptionally repressed in demethylated tumours with CpG island promoter hypermethylation. Global methylation loss correlated with immune evasion signatures independently of mutation burden and aneuploidy. Methylome data of our cohort (n = 60) and a published cohort (n = 81) in lung cancer and a melanoma cohort (n = 40) consistently demonstrated that genomic methylation alterations counteract the contribution of high mutation burden and increase immunotherapeutic resistance. Higher predictive power was observed for methylation loss than mutation burden. We also found that genomic hypomethylation correlates with the immune escape signatures of aneuploid tumours. Hence, DNA methylation alterations implicate epigenetic modulation in precision immunotherapy.


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