Illumina Methylation Assay

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The Illumina Methylation Assay using the Infinium I platform uses 'BeadChip' technology[clarification needed] to generate a comprehensive genome-wide profiling of human DNA methylation. Similar to bisulfite sequencing and pyrosequencing, this method quantifies methylation levels at various loci within the genome. This assay is used for methylation probes on the Illumina Infinium HumanMethylation27 BeadChip (henceforth, 27k [methylation] array). Probes on the 27k array target regions of the human genome to measure methylation levels at 27,578 CpG dinucleotides in 14,495 genes.[1] In 2008, Illumina released the Infinium HumanMethylation450 BeadChip array (“450 K array”), which targets over 450,000 methylation sites.[2] In 2016, the Infinium MethylationEPIC BeadChip ("EPIC") was released, which interrogates over 850,000 methylation sites across the human genome.[3]

Background

DNA methylation plays a significant role in the epigenetic regulation of chromatin structure, which in the last decade has been recognized to be important in the regulation of gene expression, development and genetic imprinting in vertebrates.[1] Changes in the methylation pattern and level have been shown to contribute to cancer and various developmental diseases.[4] For example, hypermethylation at the promoter CpG islands of a tumour suppressor gene, which in turn leads to its silencing, is frequently associated with tumourgenesis.[4] A large scale measurement of DNA methylation patterns from a wide selection of genes may enable us to understand better the relationships between epigenetic changes and the genesis of different diseases and a better understanding of the role that epigenetics plays in tissue specific differentiation.

Table 1. Methylation Statistics

Material

The Illumina 27k methylation chip contains 27,578 individual CpG sites, spread across 14,495 genes.[1] These genes include RefSeq genes from the NCBI CCDS Database, cancer genes that show differential methylation patterns during their course of progression and microRNA promoters.[5] The markers included in the chip are summarized in Table 1.[5]

Method

Figure 1. Workflow of the Infinium I assay. A single BeadChip accommodates 12 samples.[1] Only one strand at the (same) locus (corresponding to e.g. the same strand, maternal and paternal copies in a diploid individual that is heterozygous for methylation at this particular locus) is depicted here. In this example, single-base extension was successful for the two dideoxynucleotides containing adenine, corresponding to one methylated and one unmethylated allele in the original (i.e., before bisulphite conversion) genome.

For the Infinium I assay chemistry technology, the process is outlined in Figure 1.
Bisulfite treatment
Approximately 1 μg of genomic DNA is used in bisulfite conversion to convert the unmethylated cytosine into uracil. The product contains unconverted cytosine where they were previously methylated, but cytosine converted to uracil if they were previously unmethylated.

Whole-genomic DNA amplification
The bisulfite treated DNA is subjected to whole-genome multiple displacement amplification via random hexamer priming and Φ29 DNA polymerase, which has a proofreading activity resulting in error rates 100 times lower than the Taq polymerase. The products are then enzymatically fragmented,[1] purified from dNTPs, primers and enzymes, and applied to the chip.[6]

Hybridization and Single-base extension
On the chip, there are two bead types for each CpG (or "CG", as per Figure 1) site per locus. Each locus tested is differentiated by different bead types.[1] Both bead types are attached to single-stranded 50-mer DNA oligonucleotides that differ in sequence only at the free end; this type of probe is known as an allele-specific oligonucleotide. One of the bead types will correspond to the methylated cytosine locus and the other will correspond to the unmethylated cytosine locus, which has been converted into uracil during bisulfite treatment and later amplified as thymine during whole-genome amplification. The bisulfite-converted amplified DNA products are denatured into single strands and hybridized to the chip via allele-specific annealing to either the methylation-specific probe or the non-methylation probe. Hybridization is followed by single-base extension with hapten-labeled dideoxynucleotides. The ddCTP and ddGTP are labeled with biotin while ddATP and ddUTP are labeled with 2,4-dinitrophenol (DNP).[7]

Fluorescence staining and scanning of chip
After incorporation of these hapten-labeled ddNTPs, multi-layered immunohistochemical assays are performed by repeated rounds of staining with a combination of antibodies to differentiate the two types.[7] After staining, the chip is scanned to show the intensities of the unmethylated and methylated bead types. (Figure 2).[1] The raw data are analyzed by the proprietary software, and the fluorescence intensity ratios between the two bead types are calculated. For a given individual at a given locus, a ratio value of 0 equals to non-methylation of the locus (i.e., homozygous unmethylated); a ratio of 1 equals to total methylation (i.e., homozygous methylated); and a value of 0.5 means that one copy is methylated and the other is not (i.e., heterozygosity), in the diploid human genome.[1][5]

Figure 2. Types of data analysis.

Analysis of methylation data
The scanned microarray images of methylation data are further analyzed by the system, which normalizes the raw data to reduce the effects of experimental variation, background and average normalization, and performs standard statistical tests on the results.[8] The data can then be compiled into several types of figures for visualization and analysis. Scatter plots are used to correlate the methylation data; bar plots to visualize relative levels of methylation at each site tested; heat maps to cluster the data to compare the methylation profile at the sites tested. Figure 2 shows the different types of results generated.

Advantages and disadvantages

Advantages

  • No PCR is required, which means that there will be no selective bias towards shorter fragments.[5]
  • Ability to survey up to 12 samples per chip allows for high throughput processing.[5]
  • Allows integration of data between other platforms such as gene expression and microRNA profiling.[5]
  • The method looks at ~2 CpG sites per CpG island, providing genome-wide coverage of methylation patterns

Disadvantages

  • Not every gene annotated in the NCBI database was included in the design of this assay. The first version covered 14,495 genes out of the 17,052 GeneIDs present at the time (Human build 36.3).[9]
  • According to Staaf et al. (2008),[10] “the Infinium II assay seemed to have dye intensity biases between the two channels used in fluorescence detection. Furthermore, this bias was not eliminated even after the data had gone through normalization algorithms used in the BeadStudio software.” This concern, while valid for the GoldenGate methylation assay, is not relevant to the HumanMethylation27k chips, where both probes in a pair extend and fluoresce within the same channel.[10]

See also

  • MethDB DNA Methylation Database

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Weisenberger, DJ. et al. (2008) Comprehensive DNA Methylation Analysis on the Illumina Infinium Assay Platform. [1]
  2. ^ Infinium® HumanMethylation450 BeadChip
  3. ^ "Infinium MethylationEPIC Kit | Methylation profiling array for EWAS". www.illumina.com. Retrieved 2020-01-10.
  4. ^ a b DNA methylation in development and human disease. Gopalakrishnan S, Van Emburgh BO, Robertson KD. Mutation Research. 2008 Dec 1;647(1-2):30-8. Epub 2008 Aug 20. Review.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Illumina: DNA Methylation Analysis: http://www.illumina.com/downloads/DNAMethylationAnalysis_DataSheet.pdf[permanent dead link]
  6. ^ Gunderson, KL. et al. A genome-wide scalable SNP genotyping assay using microarray technology. Nature Genetics 37, 549 - 554 (2005).
  7. ^ a b Steemers, FJ. et al. Whole-genome genotyping with the single-base extension assay. Nature methods, Vol. 3, No. 1, Jan, 31 – 33 (2006).
  8. ^ BeadStudio Methylation Module User Guide. Version 3. Illumina Systems & Software. 2006
  9. ^ NCBI, Consensus CDS (CCDS) project
  10. ^ a b Staaf, J. et al. Normalization of Illumina Infinium whole-genome SNP data improves copy number estimates and allelic intensity ratios. BMC Bioinformatics 2008, 9:409. [2]

External links