“…Remarkably, using regioneR (48), which assesses the relation between genomic regions using a permutation test, we observed that a higher proportion of miRNA genes than expected by chance is embedded in CpG islands susceptible to methylation (189 of 1881; z-score = 46.13; number of permutations = 1000; p-value = 0.0009, Figure 1B and C, Table 1 and shown in red in Figure 1A), which might explain why certain miRNAs are more prone to be epigenetically regulated by methylation than others. Furuta et al (49) studied the methylation grade of CpG islands close to 39 miRNA genes in hepatocellular carcinoma cell lines and found that miR-124-1, miR-124-3, miR-203 and miR-375, which were completely embedded in a CpG island, underwent methylation-mediated silencing ( Figure 2A). miRNAs can be classified into two broad categories according to their genomic region: intergenic and intragenic (50,51).…”