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COLD-PCR Amplification of Bisulfite-Converted DNA Allows the Enrichment and Sequencing of Rare Un-Methylated Genomic Regions

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2014

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Public Library of Science
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Castellanos-Rizaldos, Elena, Coren A. Milbury, Elli Karatza, Clark C. Chen, G. Mike Makrigiorgos, and Anne Merewood. 2014. “COLD-PCR Amplification of Bisulfite-Converted DNA Allows the Enrichment and Sequencing of Rare Un-Methylated Genomic Regions.” PLoS ONE 9 (4): e94103. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0094103. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0094103.

Abstract

Aberrant hypo-methylation of DNA is evident in a range of human diseases including cancer and diabetes. Development of sensitive assays capable of detecting traces of un-methylated DNA within methylated samples can be useful in several situations. Here we describe a new approach, fast-COLD-MS-PCR, which amplifies preferentially un-methylated DNA sequences. By employing an appropriate denaturation temperature during PCR of bi-sulfite converted DNA, fast-COLD-MS-PCR enriches un-methylated DNA and enables differential melting analysis or bisulfite sequencing. Using methylation on the MGMT gene promoter as a model, it is shown that serial dilutions of controlled methylation samples lead to the reliable sequencing of un-methylated sequences down to 0.05% un-methylated-to-methylated DNA. Screening of clinical glioma tumor and infant blood samples demonstrated that the degree of enrichment of un-methylated over methylated DNA can be modulated by the choice of denaturation temperature, providing a convenient method for analysis of partially methylated DNA or for revealing and sequencing traces of un-methylated DNA. Fast-COLD-MS-PCR can be useful for the detection of loss of methylation/imprinting in cancer, diabetes or diet-related methylation changes.

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Biology and life sciences, Biochemistry, DNA, DNA amplification, DNA modification, Nucleic Acids, Cell Biology, Molecular Cell Biology, Genetics, Epigenetics, Gene Expression, Medicine and Health Sciences, Clinical Genetics, Oncology, Cancer Detection and Diagnosis

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