Whole genome DNA methylation profles defne Meniere’s disease subclusters
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Patil, Vibha; Cruz-Granados, Pablo; Cara, Francisca E.; Amor-Dorado, Juan Carlos; Aran, Ismael; Soto-Varela, Andrés; Pérez-Carpena, Patricia; Lopez-Escamez, Jose AntonioEditorial
Springer
Materia
WGBS Meniere’s disease T-cells
Fecha
2025-08-06Referencia bibliográfica
Patil, V., Cruz-Granados, P., Cara, F.E. et al. Whole genome DNA methylation profiles define Meniere’s disease subclusters. J Mol Med (2025). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00109-025-02581-6
Patrocinador
Andalusian Health Department (EPIVERT) - (PI027-2020); University of Sydney (K7013_B3413)Resumen
Meniere disease (MD) is a cochleo-vestibular syndrome defned by episodes of vertigo associated with tinnitus and sensorineural hearing loss. While MD immune response has been linked to autoinfammation and type 2 cytokines, other molecular
mechanisms such as DNA methylation have an emerging yet underexplored role in MD pathophysiology.To understand the
role of DNA methylation in MD, we performed whole-genome bisulphite sequencing in MD patients (n=40) and controls
(n=13) and used diferentially methylated cytosines (DMCs) to defne clusters, cell types, and biochemical pathways in MD.
We found three MD subclusters: Cluster 1 (40% of patients) and Cluster 3 (25%) showed DMC profles against controls,
while Cluster 2 (35%) did not. Signifcant DMCs from Cluster 1 and Cluster 3 versus Control analysis were annotated to
3033 and 59 unique genes, respectively. Each cluster showed a diferent gene enrichment; however, the KDMB4 gene had
signifcant upregulated DNA accessibility in a complementary ATAC-seq dataset and showed signifcant DMCs in both
Cluster 1 and Cluster 3. DNA methylation patterns in MD reveal three clusters which are refective of an underlying diference in pathways related to cytokine stimulus, immunity T-cell, and NK-cell pathways. KDMB4 emerges as a critical MD
gene which deserves further research.





