Permutation-based significance analysis reduces the type 1 error rate in bisulphite sequencing data analysis of human umbilical cord blood samples

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Abstract

DNA methylation patterns are largely established in-utero and might mediate the impacts of in-utero conditions on later health outcomes. Associations between perinatal DNA methylation marks and pregnancy-related variables, such as maternal age and gestational weight gain, have been earlier studied with methylation microarrays, which typically cover less than 2% of human CpG sites. To detect such associations outside these regions, we chose the bisulphite sequencing approach. We collected and curated clinical data on 200 newborn infants; whose umbilical cord blood samples were analysed with the reduced representation bisulphite sequencing (RRBS) method. A generalized linear mixed-effects model was fit for each high coverage CpG site, followed by spatial and multiple testing adjustment of P values to identify differentially methylated cytosines (DMCs) and regions (DMRs) associated with clinical variables, such as maternal age, mode of delivery, and birth weight. Type 1 error rate was then evaluated with a permutation analysis. We discovered a strong inflation of spatially adjusted P values through the permutation analysis, which we then applied for empirical type 1 error control. The inflation of P values was caused by a common method for spatial adjustment and DMR detection, implemented in tools comb-p and RADMeth. Based on empirically estimated significance thresholds, very little differential methylation was associated with any of the studied clinical variables, other than sex. With this analysis workflow, the sex-associated differentially methylated regions were highly reproducible across studies, technologies, and statistical models.

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Laajala, E., Halla-aho, V., Grönroos, T., Kalim, U. U., Vähä-Mäkilä, M., Nurmio, M., … Lähdesmäki, H. (2022). Permutation-based significance analysis reduces the type 1 error rate in bisulphite sequencing data analysis of human umbilical cord blood samples. Epigenetics, 17(12), 1608–1627. https://doi.org/10.1080/15592294.2022.2044127

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