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Data from Preneoplastic Alterations Define CLL DNA Methylome and Persist through Disease Progression and Therapy

Authors :
Alexander Meissner
Catherine J. Wu
Andreas Gnirke
Elias Campo
Thomas J. Kipps
Bernd Timmermann
Sven Klages
Donna S. Neuberg
Kenneth J. Livak
Shuqiang Li
Lili Wang
Jennifer R. Brown
Stacey M. Fernandes
Neil E. Kay
Tait D. Shanafelt
Esteban Braggio
Susan L. Slager
Connie Lesnick
Arman W. Mohammad
Laura Rassenti
Hongcang Gu
Michaela Gruber
Kendell Clement
Camilla K. Lemvigh
Noelia Purroy
Anat Biran
Helene Kretzmer
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Most human cancers converge to a deregulated methylome with reduced global levels and elevated methylation at select CpG islands. To investigate the emergence and dynamics of the cancer methylome, we characterized genome-wide DNA methylation in preneoplastic monoclonal B-cell lymphocytosis (MBL) and chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), including serial samples collected across disease course. We detected the aberrant tumor-associated methylation landscape at CLL diagnosis and found no significant differentially methylated regions in the high-count MBL-to-CLL transition. Patient methylomes showed remarkable stability with natural disease and posttherapy progression. Single CLL cells were consistently aberrantly methylated, indicating a homogeneous transition to the altered epigenetic state and a distinct expression profile together with MBL cells compared with normal B cells. Our longitudinal analysis reveals the cancer methylome to emerge early, which may provide a platform for subsequent genetically driven growth dynamics, and, together with its persistent presence, suggests a central role in disease onset.Significance:DNA methylation data from a large cohort of patients with MBL and CLL show that epigenetic transformation emerges early and persists throughout disease stages with limited subsequent changes. Our results indicate an early role for this aberrant landscape in the normal-to-preneoplastic transition that may reflect a pan-cancer mechanism.See related commentary by Rossi, p. 6.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3e0465fb04b233bbc5e5b4e45d434aa6