Functional human genes typically exhibit epigenetic conservation

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Abstract

Recent DepMap CRISPR-Cas9 single gene disruptions have identified genes more essential to proliferation in tissue culture. It would be valuable to translate these finding with measurements more practical for human tissues. Here we show that DepMap essential genes and other literature curated functional genes exhibit cell-specific preferential epigenetic conservation when DNA methylation measurements are compared between replicate cell lines and between intestinal crypts from the same individual. Culture experiments indicate that epigenetic drift accumulates through time with smaller differences in more functional genes. In NCI-60 cell lines, greater targeted gene conservation correlated with greater drug sensitivity. These studies indicate that two measurements separated in time allow normal or neoplastic cells to signal through conservation which human genes are more essential to their survival in vitro or in vivo.

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Rud, D., Marjoram, P., Siegmund, K., & Shibata, D. (2021). Functional human genes typically exhibit epigenetic conservation. PLoS ONE, 16(9 September 2021). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0253250

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