Application of Multiplex Bisulfite PCR-Ligase Detection Reaction-Real-Time Quantitative PCR Assay in Interrogating Bioinformatically Identified, Blood-Based Methylation Markers for Colorectal Cancer.

TitleApplication of Multiplex Bisulfite PCR-Ligase Detection Reaction-Real-Time Quantitative PCR Assay in Interrogating Bioinformatically Identified, Blood-Based Methylation Markers for Colorectal Cancer.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2020
AuthorsBacolod MD, Mirza AH, Huang J, Giardina SF, Feinberg PB, Soper SA, Barany F
JournalJ Mol Diagn
Volume22
Issue7
Pagination885-900
Date Published2020 Jul
ISSN1943-7811
KeywordsBase Sequence, Biomarkers, Tumor, Circulating Tumor DNA, Cohort Studies, Colorectal Neoplasms, Computational Biology, CpG Islands, DNA Methylation, HT29 Cells, Humans, Ligases, Multiplex Polymerase Chain Reaction, Promoter Regions, Genetic, Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction, Septins, Vimentin
Abstract

The analysis of CpG methylation in circulating tumor DNA fragments has emerged as a promising approach for the noninvasive early detection of solid tumors, including colorectal cancer (CRC). The most commonly employed assay involves bisulfite conversion of circulating tumor DNA, followed by targeted PCR, then real-time quantitative PCR (alias methylation-specific PCR). This report demonstrates the ability of a multiplex bisulfite PCR-ligase detection reaction-real-time quantitative PCR assay to detect seven methylated CpG markers (CRC or colon specific), in both simulated (approximately 30 copies of fragmented CRC cell line DNA mixed with approximately 3000 copies of fragmented peripheral blood DNA) and CRC patient-derived cell-free DNAs. This scalable assay is designed for multiplexing and incorporates steps for improved sensitivity and specificity, including the enrichment of methylated CpG fragments, ligase detection reaction, the incorporation of ribose bases in primers, and use of uracil DNA glycosylase. Six of the seven CpG markers (located in promoter regions of PPP1R16B, KCNA3, CLIP4, GDF6, SEPT9, and GSG1L) were identified through integrated analyses of genome-wide methylation data sets for 31 different types of cancer. These markers were mapped to CpG sites at the promoter region of VIM; VIM and SEPT9 are established epigenetic markers of CRC. Additional bioinformatics analyses show that the methylation at these CpG sites negatively correlates with the transcription of their corresponding genes.

DOI10.1016/j.jmoldx.2020.03.009
Alternate JournalJ Mol Diagn
PubMed ID32407802
PubMed Central IDPMC7338890
Grant ListP20 GM130423 / GM / NIGMS NIH HHS / United States
P41 EB020594 / EB / NIBIB NIH HHS / United States

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