Login
Register
Need Help?
ABOUT
ABOUT THE EGA
EGA
Privacy Notice
Security
Team
STATISTICS
Bibliography
Growth
Community
Archive
Distribution
Catalog
PROJECTS AND FUNDERS
Projects
Funders
GA4GH
Federated EGA
Beacon
DISCOVERY
CATALOGUE
Studies
Datasets
DACs
Synthetic Data
METADATA
Search Box
Public Metadata API
SUBMISSION
DATA
File preparation
Uploading files
METADATA
EGA Schema
Sequencing & Phenotype
Submitter Portal
Submitter Portal API
Array
Programmatic Submission XML
ACCESS
DATA ACCESS COMMITTEE
What is a DAC?
Best Practices
DAC Portal
Data Use Conditions
REQUEST DATA
How to request data?
Quality Control Reports
DOWNLOAD
Metadata
Files
PyEGA3
Live Outbox
Visualisation
FUSE Client
EGA QuickView
Tips on how to search
DACs
EGAC00001002626
Cell Free Plasma Methyl-DNA Data Access Committee
Request Access
This DAC controls 1 dataset
Dataset ID
Description
Technology
Samples
EGAD00001008696
Circulating cell-free methyl-DNA (mcfDNA) contains promising cancer markers but its low abundance and possibly diverse origin pose challenges toward the accurate diagnosis of early stage cancers. By whole-genome bisulfite sequencing (WGBS) of cell-free DNA (cfDNA) from about 0.5 mL plasma of mice xenografted with human tumors, we obtained and aligned the reads to the human genome, filtered out the mouse and carrier bacterial sequences, and confirmed the tumor origin of methyl-cfDNA (mctDNA) by methylation-sensitive restriction enzyme digestion prior to species-specific PCR. We estimated that human tumor-specific reads (ctDNA) or mctDNA comprised about 0.29 or 0.01%, respectively of the xenograft mouse cfDNA, and about 0.029 or 0.001% of the cfDNA of human early stage cancer patients. Similar WGBS of early stage (0-II, node- and metastasis-free) breast, lung or colorectal cancer samples identified hundreds of specific DMRs (differentially methylated regions) compared to healthy controls. Their association with tumourigenesis was supported by stage-dependent methylation, tumor suppressor or oncogene clusters, and genes also identified in the xenograft samples. Using 20 three-cancer-common and 17 colorectal cancer-specific DMRs in combination (top 0.0018% of the WGBS methylation clusters) was sufficient to distinguish the stage I colorectal cancers from breast and lung cancers and healthy controls. Our data thus confirmed the tumor origin of mctDNA by sequence specificity, and provide a selection threshold for authentic tumor mctDNA markers toward precise diagnosis of early stage cancers solely by top DMRs in combination.
HiSeq X Ten
24