The Homeobox Gene MEIS1 Is Methylated in BRAF p.V600E Mutated Colon Tumors

Development of colorectal cancer (CRC) can occur both via gene mutations in tumor suppressor genes and oncogenes, as well as via epigenetic changes, including DNA methylation. Site-specific methylation in CRC regulates expression of tumor-associated genes. Right-sided colon tumors more frequently have BRAF p.V600E mutations and have higher methylation grades when compared to left-sided malignancies. The aim of this study was to identify DNA methylation changes associated with BRAF p.V600E mutation status. We performed methylation profiling of colon tumor DNA, isolated from frozen sections enriched for epithelial cells by macro-dissection, and from paired healthy tissue. Single gene analyses comparing BRAF p.V600E with BRAF wild type revealed MEIS1 as the most significant differentially methylated gene (log2 fold change: 0.89, false discovery rate-adjusted P-value 2.8*10-9). This finding was validated by methylation-specific PCR that was concordant with the microarray data. Additionally, validation in an independent cohort (n=228) showed a significant association between BRAF p.V600E and MEIS1 methylation (OR: 13.0, 95% CI: 5.2 - 33.0, P<0.0001). MEIS1 methylation was associated with decreased MEIS1 gene expression in both patient samples and CRC cell lines. The same was true for gene expression of a truncated form of MEIS1, MEIS1 D27, which misses exon 8 and has a proposed tumor suppression function. To trace the origin of MEIS1 promoter methylation, 14 colorectal tumors were flow-sorted. Four out of eight BRAF p.V600E tumor epithelial fractions (50%) showed MEIS1 promoter methylation, as well as three out of eight BRAF p.V600E stromal fractions (38%). Only one out of six BRAF wild type showed MEIS1 promoter methylation in both the epithelial tumor and stromal fractions (17%). In conclusion, BRAF p.V600E colon tumors showed significant MEIS1 promoter methylation, which was associated with decreased MEIS1 gene expression.


Introduction
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a frequently occurring malignancy in the Western world with a 5% life-time risk [1] and a high worldwide annual incidence (n = 1,200,000) and mortality (n = 608,000) [2].CRC is caused by inactivating mutations in tumor suppressor genes and/or activating mutations in proto-oncogenes.Such mutated oncogenes include KRAS and BRAF that are mutually exclusive in colon tumors [3] and are both part of the Mitogen Activated Protein Kinase (MAPK) pathway.In this biological route, signals traffic from growth factor receptors present on the cell membrane towards the nucleus and finally cause cell proliferation [4].The BRAF gene encodes for the serine/threonine-protein kinase B-Raf and the most commonly found BRAF mutation in CRC is present in exon 15 (c.1799TA) [5].This mutation leads to substitution of valine by the negatively charged glutamic acid at position 600 (BRAF p.V600E ) and increased protein kinase activity [6].As a result, BRAF p.V600E leads to constitutive signaling of the MAPK pathway, independent from upstream growth signals.The BRAF p.V600E mutation frequency increases gradually from the rectum to the right-sided colon rather than showing a leftright dichotomy [7].Additionally, the BRAF p.V600E mutation is an adverse prognostic factor among patients with CRC [8][9][10][11][12][13] and is associated with both microsatellite instability (MSI-H) and genome-wide DNA promoter methylation [3,14].MSI-H is caused by deficient mismatch repair as a result of MLH1 mutation or promoter methylation [15].
In contrast to DNA mutations, DNA methylation is a form of epigenetic alteration in which the DNA sequence is retained.Methylation occurs at the 5-position of the pyrimidine cytosine, only when followed by the purine guanine.DNA promoter methylation is an important epigenetic mechanism that causes gene silencing and has been linked to colon cancer [16,17].To date, the role of the BRAF p.V600E mutation in DNA hypermethylation as found in colon tumors remains unclear.
The aim of this study was to analyze our previous dataset of BRAF p.V600E and BRAF wild type tumors [18] at the level of single genes.The most significantly hypermethylated gene in BRAF p.V600E colon tumors was the homeobox gene MEIS1.We explored the relationship between MEIS1 promoter methylation and the BRAF p.V600E mutation in additional cohorts.We show that MEIS1 methylation occurred more frequently in BRAF p.V600E mutated colon tumors, and that it corresponded with decreased MEIS1 gene expression.

Ethics statement
Specific need for ethics committee's approval was not necessary for this study.All samples were handled according to the medical ethical guidelines described in the Code Proper Secondary Use of Human Tissue established by the Dutch Federation of Medical Sciences (www.federa.org,accessed October 27, 2010).According to these guidelines all human material used in this study has been anonymized since clinical data were not used.Because of this anonymization procedure individual patients' permission is not needed.

Inclusion of patients
The first set of snap-frozen colorectal tumors meant for genome-wide differential methylation screening, originated from 19 anonymized patients with sporadic right-sided colon cancer were included who underwent surgery between 2002-2005 at the Leiden University Medical Center (Leiden, The Netherlands) or at the Rijnland Hospital (Leiderdorp, The Netherlands), as described previously [18].Only patients of whom both tumor and corresponding normal tissue was available were further included.
A second, independent set of colorectal tumors was included for replication of results found in the first data set and consisted of 228 sporadic CRC patients who were operated between 1990 and 2005 at the Leiden University Medical Center.The third independent set consisted of 14 stage III colorectal tumors, of which aneuploid tumor cells and normal stromal cells were flow-sorted [19].

Sample preparation
For the first set of 19 colorectal tumors, fresh-frozen tumor tissue was first macrodissected based on evaluation of hematoxylin and eosin (HE) stained slides to remove nontumor tissue [18].In the second set of 228 colorectal tumors, formalin-fixed paraffin embedded (FFPE) colon tumor tissue was collected as 0.6 mm-diameter punches with a tissue microarrayer (Beecher Instruments, Inc., Sun Prairie, WI) based on evaluation of HE-stained slides [28].The third set of 14 colorectal tumors was obtained from a previous study [19].For each case, three different fractions were available: (i) the whole tumor sample; this fraction contained more than 50 to 70% of tumor cells obtained through HE-guided macrodissection; (ii) the DNA aneuploid, keratin-positive epithelial subpopulation; (iii) the vimentin-positive normal, diploid subpopulation.To obtain flow-sorted fractions, cell suspensions from each tumor were simultaneously stained for the epithelial cell marker keratin, the stromal marker vimentin, and for DNA content (propidium iodide).The samples were subsequently flow-sorted, as previously described [29].The vimentin-positive fraction contained the normal stromal cells and lymphocytes that were present in the tumor tissue.The aneuploid keratin-positive fraction contained the epithelial tumor cells and was devoid of lymphocytes.For one tumor, two different keratin-positive tumor subpopulations were identified (TS510t); these were studied separately.

DNA isolation and BRAF mutation analysis
For both the cell lines and the first set of 19 patients, DNA was isolated based on phenol/chloroform extraction, followed by ethanol precipitation.DNA from the 19 colorectal tumors were hybridized on Agilent 244k human CpG island microarrays (Agilent Technologies, Santa Clara, CA, U.S.A.), as described previously [18].For the replication set of 228 colorectal tumors and fractionation set of 14 colorectal tumors, DNA was isolated using the NucleoSpin ® Tissue kit (Machery-Nagel, Germany).The BRAF p.V600E mutation was detected using exon 15 based mutant-allele-specific PCR [30].

RNA extraction and RT-qPCR
Total RNA was isolated from human and cell line samples with TRIzol (Invitrogen, Paisley, U.K.) according to the manufacturer's instructions.Subsequently, total RNA was purified with RNeasy Midi columns (QIAGEN, Venlo, The Netherlands), including a DNAse incubation step.RNA integrity and quality were evaluated by gel electrophoresis and spectrophotometric analysis on a Nanodrop ® (Thermo Scientific).For cDNA synthesis a mix of 1-2 µg of RNA, 1-2 U RNAsin/µL (RNasin ® Ribonuclease Inhibitor, Promega, Leiden, The Netherlands), 2.5 ng oligodT/µL, 0.08 µg Random primers/µL, 1 mM dNTPs and 0.25 U AMV RT transcriptase/µL was incubated for 1 hour at 42°C in a final volume of 20 µL.Subsequently, 2 µL of 25x diluted cDNA originating from cell lines or 125x diluted cDNA originating from human samples was assayed with 1x SensiMixPlus Sybr mix (GCBiotech, Augsburg, Germany) and 0.1 µM Forward and Reverse primer in a final volume of 8 µL.
Primer sequences for both RT-qPCR and methylation specific PCR (MSP), as well as the corresponding assays are shown in the Table S1.MEIS1 primers were designed as intron spanning primers across exon 5 and 6, to recognize the full length gene.The primer set for MEIS1 D27 only recognizes truncated MEIS1, i.e. when exon 7 and 9 are fused after skipping of exon 8 [31].MEIS1 and MEIS1 D27 gene expression were corrected for the geometric mean of two housekeeping genes, CPSF6 and HNRNPM [32].The Ct-values for human samples varied between 28 and 38, whereas Ct-values for human cell lines varied between 25 and 37.

Methylation-specific PCR
Methylation-specific PCR (MSP) was performed for MEIS1 and MLH1 promoter regions.Following phenol/chloroform based DNA extraction isolation from frozen tissue of both tumor and paired normal tissues, 200 ng of DNA was bisulfite converted using the EZ DNA Methylation-Gold™ Kit (Zymo Research, Irvine, CA, U.S.A.), and eluted in 15 µL of M-Elution Buffer.Subsequently, 1 µL out of 15 µL eluate was amplified with 0.5 µM of each primer set that makes a distinction between unmethylated (Um) and methylated (M) MEIS1 and MLH1, in combination with 0.1 U/µL AmpliTaq Gold ® DNA Polymerase (Applied Biosystems) and 0.2 mM dNTP mix.Details regarding the primer sets and corresponding assays are shown in Table S1.For high-throughput analyses of MEIS1 promoter methylation status in the consecutive set of 228 patients, the above mentioned MEIS1-MSP protocol was slightly modified by adding the DNA-binding dye SYTO9 (1:500), enabling a real-time PCR based analysis of MEIS1 methylation status.

Statistical analyses
Agilent microarray data of paired tumor and normal tissue were processed in R2.10.0 (Bioconductor), as previously described [18].Briefly, within-array normalization was performed with LOESS, followed by between-array normalization using Limma v3.2 [33], resulting in log 2 ratios of tumor versus normal.Since the amplicon generation was based on MseI digestion, array probes were mapped to MseI fragments.For fragments with more than one mapped probe, the probe with the median log 2 ratio was chosen as representative for the fragment.A linear model in Limma [34] was used to select differential methylation between BRAF wild type and mutant groups with a false discovery rate (FDR) ≤ 0.001 [35].DNA methylation array data were deposited in the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) under accession number GSE39334.
The association between BRAF p.V600E and MEIS1 promoter methylation was tested in a consecutive set of 228 patients by univariate logistic regression.The BRAF p.V600E associated variables right-sided tumor location and MSI-H were also tested for association with MEIS1 promoter methylation.Additionally, MEIS1 promoter methylation as a function of the interaction of these three variables was tested with multivariate logistic regression, using R2.16.The odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence interval (CI) were reported.

Patients
For this study, three independent sets of colorectal tumors were employed.For single gene analyses of DNA methylation profiling and validation, 19 paired tumor-normal samples were selected on presence in the ascending colon, including 8 BRAF p.V600E (6 of which were MSI-H and 2 MSS) and 11 BRAF wild types (9 of which were MSS and 2 MSI-H).Additional tumor characteristics, including histology, mismatch repair status, CpG island methylator phenotype (CIMP), KRAS and p53 mutation status and MLH1 methylation status are shown in Table S2 and were described previously [18].
Secondly, the association between MEIS1 promoter methylation and BRAF p.V600E as initially found with CpG island microarray analyses was studied in a consecutive series of 228 colorectal tumors consisting of 54% males and an average age of 66 ± 12 years (mean ± SD).Tumors were tested for MEIS1 promoter methylation status (n = 228), MSI status (n = 213), BRAF mutation status (n = 163) and tumor location (n = 168).The overlap between these sub-divisions is shown in Figure S1.
Thirdly, the MEIS1 promoter methylation status was determined in flow-sorted epithelial and stromal fractions of 14 patient samples that were part of a previous study [19] and shown in Table S3.

Differential methylation of BRAF p.V600E compared to BRAF wild types
Tumor versus paired normal methylation ratios were compared between BRAF p.V600E and BRAF wild types to identify BRAF p.V600E specific DNA methylation.In total, 210 fragments associated with 200 unique genes were differentially methylated (FDR ≤ 0.001).The top 10 of most significantly differentially methylated loci all showed high methylation ratios in BRAF p.V600E colorectal tumors (Table 1).The highest significance was found for MEIS1 (log 2 fold change: 0.89, FDR: 2.8*10 -9 ), showing a ± 700x higher significance than the second differentially methylated gene.The top differentially methylated region mapped to the MEIS1 promoter region, located 300 bp upstream from the transcription start site.BRAF p.V600E tumors unequivocally showed elevated MEIS1 methylation levels when compared to BRAF wild types which showed an approximately equal extent of methylation in both tumor and paired normal colon tissue (Figure 1A).

Validation of MEIS1 promoter methylation
MSP was employed to validate MEIS1 promoter methylation, as found on the Agilent microarrays.An overview of the tested MEIS1 region is given in Figure 1B.MSP performed on the same array-hybridized samples confirmed that MEIS1 methylation was exclusively found in BRAF p.V600E tumors, whereas BRAF wild type tumors were unmethylated (Figure 1C).Furthermore, the normal tissue associated with both BRAF p.V600E and BRAF wild type tumors only showed unmethylated MEIS1.As a positive control for DNA quality and bisulfite conversion, we determined MLH1 methylation in the same samples by MSP.The results were concordant with the mismatch repair status of these sporadic tumors, and with the DNA methylation array data for MLH1 (Figure S2 A-C), suggesting high quality of bisulfite converted DNA.These data confirm that the MEIS1 promoter is methylated in BRAF p.V600E colon tumors, but unmethylated in both normal tissue and BRAF wild type colon tumors.

Validation of MEIS1 promoter methylation in a consecutive cohort
To exclude the possibility that the correlation between BRAF p.V600E and MEIS1 promoter methylation is a cohort specific effect, we analyzed an independent consecutive series of 228 colorectal tumors.The MEIS1 promoter methylation status was determined by MSP, and analyzed in relation to BRAF mutation status, MSI status, and tumor location (Figure S1).In total, 18% of samples carried BRAF p.V600E , 12% were MSI-H and 33% were located in the proximal colon.In BRAF p.V600E tumors 60% (18 out of 30) of the samples were methylated for MEIS1, while BRAF wild type tumors showed 13% (17 out of 133) MEIS1 methylation.Univariate analysis, which considers individual variables contributing to MEIS1 promoter methylation (BRAF mutation status, MSI status, and tumor location), showed that BRAF p.V600E had the highest association with MEIS1 promoter methylation (OR = 13.0,CI = 5.2 -33.0,P = 0.0001; Table 2).Lower associations were found between MSI-H and MEIS1 promoter methylation (OR = 6.9, CI = 2.4 -19.7,P = 0.0003), and between tumor location and MEIS1 promoter methylation (OR = 2.4, CI = 1.1 -5.4,P = 0.028).
Since BRAF p.V600E correlates with MSI-H and right-sided tumor location within the colon [3,14], multivariate logistic regression was performed to unravel possible associations between these three variables.BRAF p.V600E was the only significant variable associated with MEIS1 promoter methylation, after adjustment for tumor location and MSI status (Adjusted OR = 10.2,CI = 3.7 -27.7,P < 0.000001).For both MSI status (Adjusted OR = 2.8, CI = 0.7 -11.0,P = 0.7) and for tumor location (Adjusted OR = 1.0,CI = 0.4 -3.0, P = 0.5), no association was found with MEIS1 methylation after adjustment for the remaining two variables.
We conclude that the BRAF p.V600E mutation has the highest association with MEIS1 promoter methylation.The frequency of MEIS1 methylation among BRAF mutant tumors in the consecutive cohort with 228 patients was lower than in the discovery cohort with 19 patients, possibly due to the small size and selection for proximal colon of the discovery samples.

MEIS1 promoter methylation is associated with decreased MEIS1 gene expression
MEIS1 gene expression was studied by RT-qPCR in samples from nine patients with available RNA out of the set of 19 patients that were analyzed by DNA methylation microarrays.MEIS1 expression in both normal and colon tumor samples was variable, possibly reflecting tissue heterogeneity and inter-individual variation.MEIS1 promoter methylation was accompanied by relatively lower levels of MEIS1 gene expression in the five BRAF p.V600E colon tumors compared with their corresponding normal paired tissue (ratios between 0.07 and 0.59, Figure 2A).In comparison, only one out of four tumors without MEIS1 methylation had lower MEIS1 expression in the tumor relative to the paired normal tissue.To exclude the effect of tissue heterogeneity, we also determined MEIS1 methylation and expression in a panel of colorectal cancer cell lines (Figure 2B).All MEIS1 methylated cell lines were devoid of MEIS1 gene expression, whereas unmethylated cell lines did show MEIS1 gene expression.Interestingly, low   levels of MEIS1 expression were detected in cell line LS411N, which showed hemi-methylated MEIS1.
In a recent study, the truncated transcription variant of MEIS1, MEIS1D 27 , showed decreased expression in the proximal colon, suggesting a tumor suppressor function [36].In line with the decreased expression of full length MEIS1, MEIS1D 27 expression was unequivocally decreased in five BRAF p.V600E patients with MEIS1 promoter methylation relative to the paired normal tissue, and in one tumor with unmethylated MEIS1 (Figure 2C).Also, the epithelial colorectal cancer cell lines with MEIS1 methylation showed absence of MEIS1D 27 expression (Figure 2D).The RT-qPCR results both in primary tissues and cell lines suggest that MEIS1 promoter methylation leads to decreased MEIS1 gene expression.

MEIS1 methylation in tumor and stromal cells
To determine the origin of MEIS1 promoter methylation in heterogeneous tissue, we studied flow-sorted epithelial tumor cells and normal stromal fractions.After flow-sorting, keratinpositive epithelial tumor fractions and vimentin-positive stromal fractions of 14 colorectal tumors were successfully analyzed, of which eight were BRAF p.V600E and six were BRAF wild type (Table 3).Amongst the BRAF p.V600E tumors, three epithelial fractions showed MEIS1 promoter methylation.Of these cases, TS510t showed tumor heterogeneity, where two aneuploid tumor fractions were isolated from the same tumor tissue.One of the tumor fractions showed MEIS1 methylation, the other fraction was unmethylated for MEIS1 and also the entire normal stromal fraction showed MEIS1 promoter methylation.For tumor TS234t, MEIS1 methylation in the tumor cells was assumed since methylation was detected in the complete tumor only and not in the flow-sorted stromal fraction.In total, four out of eight BRAF p.V600E tumor epithelial fractions (50%) showed MEIS1 promoter methylation.Furthermore, three out of eight BRAF p.V600E tumor stromal fractions showed MEIS1 promoter methylation (38%).Amongst the BRAF wild type tumors, one out of six showed MEIS1 promoter methylation in both the epithelial and stromal fractions (17%).
These data independently confirm that MEIS1 promoter methylation has indeed occurred in the epithelial tumor cells of colon tumors carrying the BRAF p.V600E mutation.In addition, also the normal stromal cells from these tumors, which consisted of tumor infiltrating lymphocytes and fibroblast-like cells, showed MEIS1 promoter methylation.

Discussion
Colorectal cancer shows molecular heterogeneity and accumulation of alterations at the level of both genetics and epigenetics, including DNA methylation.BRAF p.V600E mutated tumors are mainly located in the proximal colon, show MSI and relatively high DNA methylation levels [3,14].Using a discovery cohort of 19 right-sided colon tumors and paired normal tissue, we found MEIS1 as the most significantly hypermethylated gene promoter associated with BRAF p.V600E mutation.The association between BRAF p.V600E and MEIS1 promoter methylation was validated in a larger, consecutive cohort and both significant when considering BRAF p.V600E as a single factor and after correction for MSI and right-sided tumor location.The frequency of MEIS1 methylation in BRAF p.V600E mutated tumors was 60% for the consecutive cohort and 50% for the epithelial fractions of flow-sorted tumor samples.The lower frequency of MEIS1 methylation in the validation cohorts compared with the discovery cohort (100%) is possibly due to the small size and selection for proximal colon of the discovery samples.In both validation cohorts, the frequency of MEIS1 methylation in BRAF wild type tumors was low (13-17%).Therefore, we conclude that the association between BRAF p.V600E and MEIS1 methylation is consistent.Strikingly, MEIS1 is a highly expressed oncogene in leukemia [37], and its downregulation is a marker that indicates a good prognosis [38].
BRAF p.V600E -associated MEIS1 methylation was associated with decreased gene expression of the full length MEIS1 transcript and a truncated isoform, MEIS1D 27 in tumors and colon cancer cell lines.In line with our data, a previous study also showed decrease of MEIS1 expression in colorectal adenomas [39].The previously reported truncated MEIS1 isoform that lacks exon 8, which is part of the DNA binding homeodomain, was shown to be expressed exclusively in the cytoplasm of epithelial cells in the right-sided colon [36].The expression of this MEIS1D 27 was decreased in colon tumors, when compared to paired normal tissue [36].Since the BRAF mutation status of these colon tumors was not reported, it is not possible to evaluate whether loss of MEIS1D 27 was associated with BRAF p.V600E .
Using flow-sorting, we detected MEIS1 promoter methylation both in the epithelial tumor fractions as well as in the normal stromal fractions.The presence of MEIS1 methylation in the epithelial fractions in tumors of which the stromal cells were not methylated, suggests a genuine role for MEIS1 methylation in colorectal tumorigenesis.However, this finding is obscured by the presence of MEIS1 methylation in the (normal) tumor stroma.We hypothesize that MEIS1 methylation in the stroma may originate from infiltrating T-lymphocytes, similar to the methylation of CDH1 in breast cancer [40].These immune cells express vimentin [41] and were shown to acquire MEIS1 methylation early during hematopoietic differentiation [42].Additionally, intra-tumor lymphocyte infiltrate in colon tumors is associated with BRAF p.V600E [43] and MSI [44][45][46][47].It should be noted that the CpG Island Methylator Phenotype (CIMP) is associated with BRAF p.V600E [15], which might imply that the CIMP status could be a confounder in the association between the BRAF mutation status and MEIS1 methylation.
In conclusion, MEIS1 methylation is associated with BRAF p.V600E in colon tumors and accompanied by a decrease of MEIS1 gene expression.Further research is necessary to study the biological role of MEIS1 in colon carcinogenesis, especially with a BRAF p.V600E mutation.

Figure 1 .
Figure 1.MEIS1 is methylated in BRAF p.V600E relative to BRAF wild type tumors.(A) The MEIS1 promoter is hypermethylated in colorectal tumors with a BRAF p.V600E mutation (black dots) when compared to wild type BRAF (white dots).The Y-axis represents the tumor vs. normal log 2 ratio for the median probe per CpG fragment.The horizontal dotted line at log 2 ratio 0 indicates an equal extent of MEIS1 methylation in tumor and normal samples.(B) Overview of the analyzed MEIS1 promoter, CpG islands within the promoter and the locus analyzed by MSP primers.Locations were based on the human genome browser (UCSC assembly March 2006, hg18).(C) MEIS1-MSP data showing hypermethylation in BRAF p.V600E colorectal tumors when compared to BRAF wild types.T: tumor; N: normal tissue; M: methylated MEIS1 promoter (168 bp); Um: Unmethylated MEIS1 promoter (176 bp).doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0079898.g001

Figure 2 .
Figure 2. Gene expression of MEIS1 and MEIS1D 27 expression in human colorectal samples and CRC cell lines.MEIS1 gene expression as measured by RT-qPCR corrected for the geometric mean of the housekeeping genes CPSF6 and HNRNPM.(A) BRAF p.V600E tumors (black bars) that were all MEIS1 methylated showed lower expression of the full length MEIS1 gene, when compared to the paired normal tissues (white bars).(B) Colorectal cancer cell lines that were methylated for the MEIS1 gene promoter were devoid of MEIS1 gene expression.HT29, LS411N and RKO colon cancer cell lines carried the BRAF p.V600E mutation, whereas the remaining cell lines were wild type for BRAF.(C) Gene expression of the truncated MEIS1D 27 transcript in BRAF p.V600E tumors (black bars) was low to absent when compared to paired normal tissue (white bars).Primer sets used, uniquely detect the truncated transcript.(D) MEIS1 methylated colon cancer cells were devoid of MEIS D27 (i.e.exon 8 skipped MEIS1).Gene expression was expressed relative to SW837.doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0079898.g002

Table 1 .
Top 10 of most significantly differentially methylated loci in a BRAF p.V600E vs. BRAF wild type comparison.

Table 2 .
Associations between MEIS1 promoter methylation and BRAF mutation status, MSI and tumor location.

Table 3 .
MEIS1 promoter methylation status of colorectal tumors and associated fractions.Overview of 14 stage III colorectal tumor samples that were flow-sorted and labeled as either epithelial (keratin-positive fraction) or stromal (vimentin-positive fraction) cells.Not available, but most likely methylated taking into account that the complete tumor was methylated and stroma unmethylated.