Abstract
Background: Although genetic or epigenetic alterations have been shown to affect the three-dimensional organization of genomes, the utility of chromatin conformation in the classification of human disease has never been addressed.Results: Here, we explore whether chromatin conformation can be used to classify human leukemia. We map the conformation of the HOXA gene cluster in a panel of cell lines with 5C chromosome conformation capture technology, and use the data to train and test a support vector machine classifier named 3D-SP. We show that 3D-SP is able to accurately distinguish leukemias expressing MLL-fusion proteins from those expressing only wild-type MLL, and that it can also classify leukemia subtypes according to MLL fusion partner, based solely on 5C data.Conclusions: Our study provides the first proof-of-principle demonstration that chromatin conformation contains the information value necessary for classification of leukemia subtypes. © 2014 Rousseau et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Rousseau, M., Ferraiuolo, M. A., Crutchley, J. L., Wang, X. Q. D., Miura, H., Blanchette, M., & Dostie, J. (2014). Classifying leukemia types with chromatin conformation data. Genome Biology, 15(4). https://doi.org/10.1186/gb-2014-15-4-r60
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.