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The DNA methylation landscape of glioblastoma disease progression shows extensive heterogeneity in time and space.

Johanna KlughammerBarbara KieselThomas RoetzerNikolaus FortelnyAmelie NemcKarl-Heinz NenningJulia FurtnerNathan C SheffieldPaul DatlingerNadine PeterMartha NowosielskiMarco AugustinMario MischkulnigThomas StröbelDonat AlparBekir ErgünerMartin SenekowitschPatrizia MoserChristian F FreyschlagJohannes KerschbaumerClaudius ThoméAstrid E GramsGünther StockhammerMelitta KitzwoegererStefan OberndorferFranz MarholdSerge WeisJohannes TrenklerJohanna BuchroithnerJosef PichlerJohannes HaybaeckStefanie KrassnigKariem Mahdy AliGord von CampeFranz PayerCamillo SherifJulius PreiserThomas HauserPeter A WinklerWaltraud KleindienstFranz WürtzTanisa Brandner-KokaljMartin StultschnigStefan SchweigerKarin DieckmannMatthias PreusserGeorg LangsBernhard BaumannEngelbert KnospGeorg WidhalmChristine MarosiJohannes A HainfellnerAdelheid WoehrerChristoph Bock
Published in: Nature medicine (2018)
Glioblastoma is characterized by widespread genetic and transcriptional heterogeneity, yet little is known about the role of the epigenome in glioblastoma disease progression. Here, we present genome-scale maps of DNA methylation in matched primary and recurring glioblastoma tumors, using data from a highly annotated clinical cohort that was selected through a national patient registry. We demonstrate the feasibility of DNA methylation mapping in a large set of routinely collected FFPE samples, and we validate bisulfite sequencing as a multipurpose assay that allowed us to infer a range of different genetic, epigenetic, and transcriptional characteristics of the profiled tumor samples. On the basis of these data, we identified subtle differences between primary and recurring tumors, links between DNA methylation and the tumor microenvironment, and an association of epigenetic tumor heterogeneity with patient survival. In summary, this study establishes an open resource for dissecting DNA methylation heterogeneity in a genetically diverse and heterogeneous cancer, and it demonstrates the feasibility of integrating epigenomics, radiology, and digital pathology for a national cohort, thereby leveraging existing samples and data collected as part of routine clinical practice.
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