Genome-wide methylation profiling identifies an essential role of reactive oxygen species in pediatric glioblastoma multiforme and validates a methylome specific for H3 histone family 3A with absence of G-CIMP/isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 mutation

Jha, Prerana ; Pia Patric, Irene Rosita ; Shukla, Sudhanshu ; Pathak, Pankaj ; Pal, Jagriti ; Sharma, Vikas ; Thinagararanjan, Sivaarumugam ; Santosh, Vani ; Suri, Vaishali ; Sharma, Mehar Chand ; Arivazhagan, Arimappamagan ; Suri, Ashish ; Gupta, Deepak ; Somasundaram, Kumaravel ; Sarkar, Chitra (2014) Genome-wide methylation profiling identifies an essential role of reactive oxygen species in pediatric glioblastoma multiforme and validates a methylome specific for H3 histone family 3A with absence of G-CIMP/isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 mutation Neuro-Oncology, 16 (12). pp. 1607-1617. ISSN 1522-8517

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1093/neuonc/nou113

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/neuonc/nou113

Abstract

Background Pediatric glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is rare, and there is a single study, a seminal discovery showing association of histone H3.3 and isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH)1 mutation with a DNA methylation signature. The present study aims to validate these findings in an independent cohort of pediatric GBM, compare it with adult GBM, and evaluate the involvement of important functionally altered pathways. Methods Genome-wide methylation profiling of 21 pediatric GBM cases was done and compared with adult GBM data (GSE22867). We performed gene mutation analysis of IDH1 and H3 histone family 3A (H3F3A), status evaluation of glioma cytosine–phosphate–guanine island methylator phenotype (G-CIMP), and Gene Ontology analysis. Experimental evaluation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) association was also done. Results Distinct differences were noted between methylomes of pediatric and adult GBM. Pediatric GBM was characterized by 94 hypermethylated and 1206 hypomethylated cytosine–phosphate–guanine (CpG) islands, with 3 distinct clusters, having a trend to prognostic correlation. Interestingly, none of the pediatric GBM cases showed G-CIMP/IDH1 mutation. Gene Ontology analysis identified ROS association in pediatric GBM, which was experimentally validated. H3F3A mutants (36.4%; all K27M) harbored distinct methylomes and showed enrichment of processes related to neuronal development, differentiation, and cell-fate commitment. Conclusions Our study confirms that pediatric GBM has a distinct methylome compared with that of adults. Presence of distinct clusters and an H3F3A mutation–specific methylome indicate existence of epigenetic subgroups within pediatric GBM. Absence of IDH1/G-CIMP status further indicates that findings in adult GBM cannot be simply extrapolated to pediatric GBM and that there is a strong need for identification of separate prognostic markers. A possible role of ROS in pediatric GBM pathogenesis is demonstrated for the first time and needs further evaluation.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Duke University Press.
Keywords:G-CIMP; H3F3A; IDH1; Methylation; Rediatric GBM; Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS).
ID Code:139293
Deposited On:26 Aug 2025 05:31
Last Modified:26 Aug 2025 05:31

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