A heterozygous IDH1R132H/WT mutation induces genome-wide alterations in DNA methylation
- Christopher G Duncan1,
- Benjamin G Barwick2,
- Genglin Jin1,
- Carlo Rago3,
- Priya Kapoor-Vazirani2,
- Doris R Powell2,
- Jen Tsan Chi1,
- Darell D Bigner1,
- Paula M Vertino2 and
- Hai Yan4,5
- 1 Duke University Medical Center;
- 2 Emory University;
- 3 Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center;
- 4 Duke University
- ↵* Corresponding author; email: hai.yan{at}dm.duke.edu
Abstract
Monoallelic point mutations of the NADP+-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenases IDH1 and IDH2 occur frequently in gliomas, acute myeloid leukemias, and chondromas and display robust association with specific DNA hypermethylation signatures. Here we show that heterozygous expression of the IDH1R132H allele is sufficient to induce the genome-wide alterations in DNA methylation characteristic of these tumors. Using a gene targeting approach, we knocked-in a single copy of the most frequently observed IDH1 mutation, R132H, into a human cancer cell line and profiled changes in DNA methylation at over 27,000 CpG dinucleotides relative to wild-type parental cells. We find that IDH1R132H/WT mutation induces widespread alterations in DNA methylation, including hypermethylation of 2,010 and hypomethylation of 842 CpG loci. We demonstrate that many of these alterations are consistent with those observed in IDH1-mutant and G-CIMP+ primary gliomas and can segregate IDH wild-type and mutated tumors, as well as those exhibiting the G-CIMP phenotype in unsupervised analysis of two primary glioma cohorts. Further, we show that the direction of IDH1R132H/WT-mediated DNA methylation change is largely dependent upon pre-existing DNA methylation levels, resulting in depletion of moderately methylated loci. Additionally, whereas the levels of multiple histone H3 and H4 methylation modifications were globally increased, consistent with broad inhibition of histone demethylation, hypermethylation at H3K9 in particular accompanied locus-specific DNA hypermethylation at several genes downregulated in IDH1R132H/WT knock-in cells. These data provide insight on epigenetic alterations induced by IDH1 mutations and support a causal role for IDH1R132H/WT mutants in driving epigenetic instability in human cancer cells.
- Received September 28, 2011.
- Accepted August 15, 2012.
- © 2012, Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
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