scholarly journals Gene Promoter Methylation Patterns throughout the Process of Cervical Carcinogenesis

2010 ◽  
Vol 32 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 131-143
Author(s):  
Nan Yang ◽  
Esther R. Nijhuis ◽  
Haukeline H. Volders ◽  
Jasper J. H. Eijsink ◽  
Ágnes Lendvai ◽  
...  

Objectives: To determine methylation status of nine genes, previously described to be frequently methylated in cervical cancer, in squamous intraepithelial lesions (SIL).Methods: QMSP was performed in normal cervix, low-grade (L)SIL, high-grade (H)SIL, adenocarcinomas and squamous cell cervical cancers, and in corresponding cervical scrapings.Results: Only CCNA1 was never methylated in normal cervices and rarely in LSILs. All other genes showed methylation in normal cervices, with CALCA, SPARC and RAR-β2 at high levels. Methylation frequency of 6 genes (DAPK, APC, TFPI2, SPARC, CCNA1 and CADM1) increased with severity of the underlying cervical lesion. DAPK showed the highest increase in methylation frequency between LSIL and HSIL (10% vs. 40%, p < 0.05), while CCNA1 and TFPI2 were most prominently methylated in cervical cancers compared to HSILs (25% vs. 52%, p < 0.05, 30% vs. 58%, p < 0.05). CADM1 methylation in cervical cancers was related to depth of invasion (p < 0.05) and lymph vascular space involvement (p < 0.01), suggesting a role in invasive potential of cervical cancers. Methylation ratios in scrapings reflected methylation status of the underlying lesions (p < 0.05).Conclusion: Methylation of previously reported cervical cancer specific genes frequently occurs in normal epithelium. However, frequency of methylation increases during cervical carcinogenesis, with CCNA1 and DAPK as the best markers to distinguish normal/LSIL from HSIL/cancer lesions.

Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 2437-2437
Author(s):  
Ying Jiang ◽  
Christine L. OKeefe ◽  
Andrew Dunbar ◽  
Anjali Advani ◽  
Mikkael A. Sekeres ◽  
...  

Abstract Genomic imprinting and epigenetic silencing determine tissue-specific methylation patterns. Altered methylation of CpG islands within gene promoters has been hypothesized as one pathogenetic mechanism operative in myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS). Promoter hypermethylation of various empirically selected tumor suppressor genes has been found in MDS prompting application of hypomethylating drugs in this disease. Identification of hypermethylated genes predicting response to these drugs would have a major impact on clinical practice. However, to date methylation-based prognostic algorithms have not been established. Global analysis of DNA methylation patterns may help to identify hypermethylated genes/promoters associated with the pathogenesis of MDS. Recently, microarray-based DNA methylation analysis platforms enabled a powerful, high-throughput analysis of the methylation status of hundreds of genes. The GoldenGate Methylation Cancer Panel I, spanning 1,536 independent CpG sites selected from 807 selected genes was applied to determine the methylation status in MDS patients (N=51; 21 low grade (RA, MDS-U, RARS or RCMD), 26 high grade (AML or RAEB) and 4 CMML). The methylation status was determined based on an internal reference and compared to healthy controls (N=22). Methylation values were averaged among the patients or analyzed separately for each patient in comparison to average values obtained in controls. Overall, controls showed a lesser degree of methylation than advanced MDS patients (average intensity 0.326 vs. 0.339, p&lt;0.05). Subsequently, we concentrated on hypermethylated genes. There were no genes uniformly hypermethylated in all patients. For 70%, 50%, and 30% of patients with advanced MDS, 1, 26, and 85 loci were concordantly hypermethylated, while in 70%, 50% and 30% of low risk patients 5, 23 and 31 were hypermethylated, respectively. The most consistently hypermethylated genes (&gt;50% of patients), included tumor suppressor genes (DCC, SLC22A18, FAT, TUSC3), genes involved in DNA repair (OGG1, DDB2, BCR, PARP1), cell cycle control (DBC1, SMARCB1), differentiation (MYOD1, TDGF1, FGF2, NOTCH4) and apoptosis (HDAC1, ALOX12, AXIN1). Despite the variability, the aberrant methylation spectrum in CMML, low grade MDS and high grade MDS showed significant overlap (for example FZD9, IL16, EVI2A, MBD2 and BCR), which suggests that these genes may relate to the common tumorigenesis in MDS. Certain genes show specific methylation correlating to the morphologic diagnosis and may serve as diagnostic markers. For example, the promoter of HDAC1 is hypomethylated in 81% of sAML/RAEB1/2 patients but hypermethylated in 81% of low risk cases. To assess the link between epigenetic changes and chromosomal abnormalities, we also investigated methylation pattern of MDS with del5q for selected genes at the 5q locus. Some genes that are involved in apoptosis (WNT1, TNF receptor) and proliferation (MAP3K8, CSF3) were found to be hypermethylated in comparison to controls, suggesting that epigenetic silencing may enhance the effect of haploinsuffciency for some of the genes. In sum, our study, the first application of a high-throughput microarray methylation assay in MDS, demonstrates that complex methylation patterns exist in MDS and may allow for identification for clinically relevant methylation markers.


2007 ◽  
Vol 53 (1) ◽  
pp. 17-23 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kai Brakensiek ◽  
Luzie U Wingen ◽  
Florian Länger ◽  
Hans Kreipe ◽  
Ulrich Lehmann

Abstract Background: Gene silencing through aberrant CpG island methylation is the most extensively analyzed epigenetic event in human tumorigenesis and has huge diagnostic and prognostic potential. Methylation patterns are often very heterogeneous, however, presenting a serious challenge for the development of methylation assays for diagnostic purposes. Methods: We used Pyrosequencing™ technology to determine the methylation status of 68 CpG sites in the CpG island of the CDKN2B gene [cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 2B (p15, inhibits CDK4)], frequently hypermethylated in myeloid malignancies, in a series of bone marrow samples from patients with myelodysplasia and myeloid leukemia (n = 82) and from 32 controls. A total of 7762 individual methylation sites were quantitatively evaluated. Precision and reproducibility of the quantification was evaluated with several overlapping primers. Results: The use of optimized sequencing primers and the new Pyro Q-CpG™ software enabled precise and reproducible quantification with a single sequencing primer of up to 15 CpG sites distributed over ∼100 bp. Extensive statistical analyses of the whole CpG island revealed for the first time disease-specific methylation patterns of the CDKN2B gene in myeloid malignancies and small regions of differential methylation with high discriminatory power that enabled differentiation of even low-grade myelodysplastic syndrome samples from the controls, a result that was confirmed in an independent group of 9 control and 36 patient samples. Conclusion: The precise quantitative methylation mapping of whole CpG islands is now possible with Pyrosequencing software in combination with optimized sequencing primers. This method reveals disease-specific methylation patterns and enables the development of specific diagnostic assays.


2009 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 321-325 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pavla Hublarova ◽  
Roman Hrstka ◽  
Pavla Rotterova ◽  
Leopold Rotter ◽  
Marie Coupkova ◽  
...  

Introduction:Human papillomavirus (HPV) infection represents the most important risk factor for the development of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) and cervical cancer. We aimed to analyze the consequences of methylation of the E6 gene promoter in distinct stages of HPV-16-induced cellular transformation to assess its importance for disease progression.Methods:Human papillomavirus 16 was detected by sensitive polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Determination of E6 gene promoter methylation was analyzed by digestion with specific restriction endonuclease McrBC followed by PCR amplification. Expression of the E6 gene was determined by quantitative real-time PCR.Results:Of 103 cervical smears from asymptomatic women with no cytological and colposcopic abnormalities, 20.4% were HPV-16-positive. Human papillomavirus 16 was present in 44.4% of 18 patients with CIN I, in 62.2% of 143 patients with CIN II/III, and in 74.2% of 31 cervix carcinoma specimens. The incidence of HPV-16 in all lesions compared with asymptomatic women was statistically significant (P< 0.001, Pearsonχ2test). Methylation was detected in 81% (n = 21) of HPV-16-positive asymptomatic smears compared with 62.5% in CIN I (n = 8), 31.5% (n = 89) in CIN II/III, and 43.4% (n = 23) in carcinomas; a statistical significance between lesions and healthy women was found (P< 0.001, Pearsonχ2test). Expression of E6 mRNA correlated with methylation status (P= 0.010, Mann-WhitneyUtest).Conclusions:We conclude that methylation of the E6 gene promoter in HPV-16 genome is a predictive biomarker for cervical cancer progression by regulating the expression of the E6 oncogene.


Development ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 116 (4) ◽  
pp. 831-839 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Ueda ◽  
K. Yamazaki ◽  
R. Suzuki ◽  
H. Fujimoto ◽  
H. Sasaki ◽  
...  

The methylation status of a mouse metallothionein-I/human transthyretin fusion gene was studied during gametogenesis in transgenic mice. In the adult tissues of this mouse line, the promoter region of the transgene on chromosome 11 is methylated when it is maternally inherited and undermethylated when it is paternally inherited. Germ cells from various developmental stages of gametogenesis were isolated, and their DNAs were assayed using methylation-sensitive restriction endonucleases and the polymerase chain reaction. Only low to nonexistent levels of transgene methylation were detected in germ cells from 14.5-day-old male and female fetuses irrespective of the parental origin of the transgene. This undermethylated state persisted in oocytes from newborn females as well as in testicular spermatogenic cells and sperm. By contrast, the transgene promoter was completely methylated in fully grown oocytes arrested at the first meiotic prophase. The endogenous metallothionein-I gene promoter, located on a different chromosome, remained undermethylated at all stages examined, consistent with previous findings reported for a typical CpG island. Taken together, the results suggest that parental-specific adult patterns of transgene methylation are established during gametogenesis.


Blood ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 94 (5) ◽  
pp. 1773-1781 ◽  
Author(s):  
Audrey S. Baur ◽  
Phil Shaw ◽  
Nathalie Burri ◽  
Françoise Delacrétaz ◽  
Fred T. Bosman ◽  
...  

The methylation status of p15INK4b(MTS2), p16INK4a (MTS1) andp14ARF (p16β) was analyzed in 56 lymphomas by restriction-enzyme related polymerase chain reaction (PCR) (REP), methylation-specific PCR (MSP), and bisulfite genomic sequencing (BGS). Methylation of the p15 andp16 genes was detected, respectively, in 64% and 32% of the B-cell lymphomas, in 44% and 22% of the T-cell lymphomas, and in none of the 5 reactive lymph nodes analyzed. Both p15 andp16 genes were methylated more often in the high-grade (78% and 50%, respectively) than in the low-grade B-cell lymphomas (55% and 21%, respectively). For 5 cases, mapping of the methylated CpGs of the p16 promoter region confirmed the results of REP and MSP. In addition, a large variation in the methylation patterns ofp16 exon 1 was observed, not only from one lymphoma to another, but also within a given tumor. Methylation of p15 andp16 was associated with an absence of gene expression, as assessed by reverse transcription-PCR. The p14 gene was unmethylated and normally expressed in all 56 tumors. We found no mutations of p15, p16, or p14 in any of the 56 lymphomas. Our results suggest a role for p15 and p16gene methylation during lymphomagenesis and a possible association between p15 and p16 inactivation and aggressive transformation in B-cell and T-cell lymphomas.


2020 ◽  
Vol 33 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
R Alfieri ◽  
E Boldrin ◽  
M Mazza ◽  
S Realdon ◽  
M Fassan ◽  
...  

Abstract   Esophageal Adenocarcinoma (EADC) prognosis is still poor. Clinical staging doesn’t allow accurate prediction of response to neoadjuvant treatment and survival. Molecular characterization of EADC is an expanding field aimed to predict treatment response and prognosis. Hypomethylation of Long Interspersed Nuclear Element 1 (LINE-1) sequences recently emerged as a frequent epigenetic alteration in EADC. Aim of the study was to evaluate methylation patterns of LINE-1 that is considered a good surrogate of global DNA methylation. Methods We investigated cell free DNA (cfDNA) of 21 patients, 19 with EADC and 2 with Barrett’s esophagus (BE). To verify the possibility to use LINE-1 methylation status to predict tumor behaviour, we extended the analysis to a few longitudinal cases, one EADC and two BE. One BE patient progressed to low-grade dysplasia (LGD) and high-grade dysplasia (HGD)/EADC during surveillance, while the other remains stable. LINE-1 promoter methylation was analyzed using restriction enzymes and DNA amplification. Results Using this approach, we were able to detect the presence of hypomethylated LINE-1 sequences in EADC cfDNA. The difference in methylation level between cfDNA and constitutive DNA was statistically significant (p = 0.0001). In one EADC patient, treated with esophagectomy, LINE-1 hypomethylation was found at lower level after resection and at higher level at recurrence. In another patient affected by BE, LINE-1 hypomethylation increased during the progression from metaplastic epithelium to EADC, switching back to the level of constitutive DNA after endoscopic resection. The third patient, with stable BE during 4 years follow-up, showed non-significant variations in methylation status of LINE-1. Conclusion Our study demonstrated the feasibility of our methodological approach to detect hypomethylation events in EADC patient cfDNA. Longitudinal preliminary analysis suggested a correlation between methylation status of LINE-1 and tumor progression. Further studies on larger population are needed to confirm these encouraging data. LINE-1 methylation analysis could be useful as a new molecular assay to integrate patient monitoring.


Cancers ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 511 ◽  
Author(s):  
Imran Khan ◽  
Miso Nam ◽  
Minji Kwon ◽  
Sang-soo Seo ◽  
Sunhee Jung ◽  
...  

Cervical cancer remains one of the most prevalent cancers among females worldwide. Therefore, it is important to discover new biomarkers for early diagnosis of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) and cervical cancer, preferably non-invasive ones. In the present study, we aimed to identify unique metabolic signatures for CINs and cervical cancers using global and targeted metabolomic profiling. Plasma samples (69 normal, 55 CIN1, 42 CIN2/3, and 60 cervical cancer) were examined by ultra-performance liquid chromatography-quadrupole-time-of-flight mass spectrometry (UPLC-QTOF-MS) coupled with multivariate statistical analysis. Metabolic pathways were analyzed using the integrated web-based tool MetaboAnalyst. A multivariate logistic regression analysis was conducted to evaluate the combined association of metabolites and human papillomavirus (HPV) status with the risk of cervical carcinogenesis. A total of 28 metabolites exhibiting discriminating levels among normal, CIN, and cervical cancer patients (Kruskal–Wallis test p < 0.05) were identified in the global profiling analysis. The pathway analysis showed significantly altered alanine, aspartate, and glutamate metabolic pathways (FDR p-value < 0.05) in both the discovery and validation phases. Seven metabolites (AMP, aspartate, glutamate, hypoxanthine, lactate, proline, and pyroglutamate) were discriminated between CINs and cervical cancer versus normal (area under the curve (AUC) value > 0.8). The levels of these metabolites were significantly high in patients versus normal (p < 0.0001) and were associated with increased risk of developing CIN2/3 and cervical cancer. Additionally, elevated levels of the seven metabolites combined with positive HPV status were correlated with substantial risk of cancer progression. These results demonstrated that metabolomics profiling is capable of distinguishing CINs and cervical cancers from normal and highlighted potential biomarkers for the early detection of cervical carcinogenesis.


Blood ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 94 (5) ◽  
pp. 1773-1781 ◽  
Author(s):  
Audrey S. Baur ◽  
Phil Shaw ◽  
Nathalie Burri ◽  
Françoise Delacrétaz ◽  
Fred T. Bosman ◽  
...  

Abstract The methylation status of p15INK4b(MTS2), p16INK4a (MTS1) andp14ARF (p16β) was analyzed in 56 lymphomas by restriction-enzyme related polymerase chain reaction (PCR) (REP), methylation-specific PCR (MSP), and bisulfite genomic sequencing (BGS). Methylation of the p15 andp16 genes was detected, respectively, in 64% and 32% of the B-cell lymphomas, in 44% and 22% of the T-cell lymphomas, and in none of the 5 reactive lymph nodes analyzed. Both p15 andp16 genes were methylated more often in the high-grade (78% and 50%, respectively) than in the low-grade B-cell lymphomas (55% and 21%, respectively). For 5 cases, mapping of the methylated CpGs of the p16 promoter region confirmed the results of REP and MSP. In addition, a large variation in the methylation patterns ofp16 exon 1 was observed, not only from one lymphoma to another, but also within a given tumor. Methylation of p15 andp16 was associated with an absence of gene expression, as assessed by reverse transcription-PCR. The p14 gene was unmethylated and normally expressed in all 56 tumors. We found no mutations of p15, p16, or p14 in any of the 56 lymphomas. Our results suggest a role for p15 and p16gene methylation during lymphomagenesis and a possible association between p15 and p16 inactivation and aggressive transformation in B-cell and T-cell lymphomas.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luhan Zhang ◽  
Hong Yu ◽  
Tian Deng ◽  
Li Ling ◽  
Juan Wen ◽  
...  

Human papillomavirus (HPV)-mediated cervical carcinogenesis is a multistep progressing from persistent infection, precancerous lesion to cervical cancer (CCa). Although molecular alterations driven by viral oncoproteins are necessary in cervical carcinogenesis, the key regulators behind the multistep process remain not well understood. It is pivotal to identify the key genes involved in the process for early diagnosis and treatment of this disease. Here we analyzed the mRNA expression profiles in cervical samples including normal, cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN), and CCa. A co-expression network was constructed using weighted gene co-expression network analysis (WGCNA) to reveal the crucial modules in the dynamic process from HPV infection to CCa development. Furthermore, the differentially expressed genes (DEGs) that could distinguish all stages of progression of CCa were screened. The key genes involved in HPV-CCa were identified. It was found that the genes involved in DNA replication/repair and cell cycle were upregulated in CIN compared with normal control, and sustained in CCa, accompanied by substantial metabolic shifts. We found that upregulated fibronectin type III domain-containing 3B (FNDC3B) and downregulated bisphosphoglycerate mutase (BPGM) could differentiate all stages of CCa progression. In patients with CCa, a higher expression of FNDC3B or lower expression of BPGM was closely correlated with a shorter overall survival (OS) and disease-free survival (DFS). A receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis of CIN and CCa showed that FNDC3B had the highest sensitivity and specificity for predicting CCa development. Taken together, the current data showed that FNDC3B and BPGM were key genes involved in HPV-mediated transformation from normal epithelium to precancerous lesions and CCa.


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