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Adjustment of Cell-Type Composition Minimizes Systematic Bias in Blood DNA Methylation Profiles Derived by DNA Collection Protocols

Author

Listed:
  • Yuh Shiwa
  • Tsuyoshi Hachiya
  • Ryohei Furukawa
  • Hideki Ohmomo
  • Kanako Ono
  • Hisaaki Kudo
  • Jun Hata
  • Atsushi Hozawa
  • Motoki Iwasaki
  • Koichi Matsuda
  • Naoko Minegishi
  • Mamoru Satoh
  • Kozo Tanno
  • Taiki Yamaji
  • Kenji Wakai
  • Jiro Hitomi
  • Yutaka Kiyohara
  • Michiaki Kubo
  • Hideo Tanaka
  • Shoichiro Tsugane
  • Masayuki Yamamoto
  • Kenji Sobue
  • Atsushi Shimizu

Abstract

Differences in DNA collection protocols may be a potential confounder in epigenome-wide association studies (EWAS) using a large number of blood specimens from multiple biobanks and/or cohorts. Here we show that pre-analytical procedures involved in DNA collection can induce systematic bias in the DNA methylation profiles of blood cells that can be adjusted by cell-type composition variables. In Experiment 1, whole blood from 16 volunteers was collected to examine the effect of a 24 h storage period at 4°C on DNA methylation profiles as measured using the Infinium HumanMethylation450 BeadChip array. Our statistical analysis showed that the P-value distribution of more than 450,000 CpG sites was similar to the theoretical distribution (in quantile-quantile plot, λ = 1.03) when comparing two control replicates, which was remarkably deviated from the theoretical distribution (λ = 1.50) when comparing control and storage conditions. We then considered cell-type composition as a possible cause of the observed bias in DNA methylation profiles and found that the bias associated with the cold storage condition was largely decreased (λadjusted = 1.14) by taking into account a cell-type composition variable. As such, we compared four respective sample collection protocols used in large-scale Japanese biobanks or cohorts as well as two control replicates. Systematic biases in DNA methylation profiles were observed between control and three of four protocols without adjustment of cell-type composition (λ = 1.12–1.45) and no remarkable biases were seen after adjusting for cell-type composition in all four protocols (λadjusted = 1.00–1.17). These results revealed important implications for comparing DNA methylation profiles between blood specimens from different sources and may lead to discovery of disease-associated DNA methylation markers and the development of DNA methylation profile-based predictive risk models.

Suggested Citation

  • Yuh Shiwa & Tsuyoshi Hachiya & Ryohei Furukawa & Hideki Ohmomo & Kanako Ono & Hisaaki Kudo & Jun Hata & Atsushi Hozawa & Motoki Iwasaki & Koichi Matsuda & Naoko Minegishi & Mamoru Satoh & Kozo Tanno &, 2016. "Adjustment of Cell-Type Composition Minimizes Systematic Bias in Blood DNA Methylation Profiles Derived by DNA Collection Protocols," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 11(1), pages 1-16, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0147519
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0147519
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