articleGenome biologyFeb 4, 2014GOLD OA

Accounting for cellular heterogeneity is critical in epigenome-wide association studies

Johns Hopkins University · Lieber Institute for Brain Development · +2 more institutions

PubMed
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Abstract

Background

Epigenome-wide association studies of human disease and other quantitative traits are becoming increasingly common. A series of papers reporting age-related changes in DNA methylation profiles in peripheral blood have already been published. However, blood is a heterogeneous collection of different cell types, each with a very different DNA methylation profile.

Results

Using a statistical method that permits estimating the relative proportion of cell types from DNA methylation profiles, we examine data from five previously published studies, and find strong evidence of cell composition change across age in blood. We also demonstrate that, in these studies, cellular composition explains much of the observed variability in DNA methylation. Furthermore, we find high levels of confounding between age-related variability and cellular composition at the CpG level.

Citation impact

1,170
total citations
FWCI
50.65
Percentile
100%
References
30
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Epigenome
  • Biology
  • Human genetics
  • Computational biology
  • Association (psychology)
  • Evolutionary biology
  • Genetics
  • Genome-wide association study
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