On 2016 Jul 13, Andrea Fuso commented:
Dear Long-Cheng, thank you for your critic comments. Discussing this issue is very important and I'm sincerely happy you took some time to read our manuscript and share your thoughts. When we published the paper, we were hopeful it could raise some discussion useful to a better understanding of the non-CpG issue.
First of all, I would like to emphasize that our paper was not a criticism of MethPrimer. As a matter of fact (as disclosed in the paper) different primer design softwares, not just “MethPrimer”, allow to design bisulfite primers based on the assumption that non-CpG cytosines are transformed. MethPrimer is simply the most used and known and we defined “methprimers” the oligo designed using these different softwares.
Our criticism were, on the contrary, addressed toward the concept that stands at the base of all these primer design softwares: i.e. that non-CpG cytosines are (almost) always demethylated.
The idea of releasing MethPrimer was great and in line with the widely accepted concept of that era on non-CpG methylation.
We should now critically consider that concept and make some effort to better understand extension and significance of non-CpG methylation and, in case, revise our tools for the study of DNA methylation. The adaptation of MethPrimer to the picking of primers in regions with few cytosines goes in this way and it is highly appreciable.
As for your comments about incomplete conversion: your considerations are correct but you are not correct when you affirm that “no efforts were made to verify the completeness of bisulfite conversion of the template DNA”.
If you look at the methods and at the previous papers cited in the methods (previously published description were not repeated and just cited) you can see that we took many efforts to demonstrate that our analysis was not affected by artifacts.
Our studies on myogenin methylation (some years ago) started with classical bisulphite conversion (no kits) but in the years we started to place side by side classical and kit-assisted bisulphite conversion, obtaining comparable results.
The present study was made by using the Qiagen Epitect Kit but specific (high and low methylated samples) controls were modified using the ZymoResearch kit and the in-lab prepared bisulphite. These controls were real samples, not just PCR products.
According to your idea that our data could be due to incomplete conversion, you should explain why incomplete conversion occurs only (or mainly) for high methylated DNA but not in low methylated DNA, since the difference between methprimers and MIPs is less when analyzing low methylated samples. In our analyses, in which samples with different (expected) methylation levels are modified in the same run, we can indeed observe both methylated and unmethylated sequences, according to the expected methylation. I think that this observation, more than any “control” witness the quality of the bisulphite conversion we make.
If you suggest, or suspect, that bisulphite conversion kit (like the Qiagen and the Zymoresearch) that are today used in almost all the methylation studies, and that are preferred to the in-lab prepared bisulphite just to guarantee reliability and avoid incomplete conversion, are responsible for incomplete conversion….well, the problem is much bigger.
I will be happy if you and others want to add more to this interesting discussion.
In conclusion, I completely agree with you that much more care should be put in the control of the bisulphite analysis…and as a reviewer of papers dealing with DNA methylation, I can see that few researchers take care of performing rigorous controls. But, I also invite you and the other colleagues to consider that new and unexpected results, such as relevant non-CpG methylation, deserve to be considered with unbiased attitude and methods.
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