Literature DB >> 10506193

Methylation sequencing analysis refines the region of H19 epimutation in Wilms tumor.

M A Frevel1, S J Sowerby, G B Petersen, A E Reeve.   

Abstract

Differential DNA methylation of the parental alleles has been implicated in the establishment and maintenance of the monoallelic expression of imprinted genes. H19 and IGF2 are oppositely imprinted with only the maternal and the paternal alleles expressed, respectively. In Wilms tumor, a childhood renal neoplasm, loss of the H19/IGF2 imprinted expression pattern results in silencing of H19 and biallelic expression of IGF2. This was shown to be associated with biallelic methylation of the H19 promoter in the tumor and the adjacent kidney tissue suggesting that epigenetic H19 silencing is an early event in Wilms tumorigenesis. An imprinting mark region characterized by paternal allele-specific methylation has been suggested to reside in a GC-rich region of 400-base pair direct repeats starting at -2 kilobase pairs (kb) relative to the H19 transcription start and extending upstream. The upstream boundary of the potential paternal methylation imprint of the H19 gene has yet to be defined. We sought to define this upstream imprint boundary and investigate whether Wilms tumors with loss of imprinting are biallelically methylated in this imprinting mark region. The analysis of 6.6 kb of new upstream H19 sequence determined in this study identified a series of the direct 400-base pair repeats that extends to approximately -5.3 kb relative to the transcription start. DNA methylation analyses indicated that the upstream boundary of the potential imprint may coincide with the 5' end of the direct repeats. We found that Wilms tumors with loss of imprinting are biallelically methylated in the H19 upstream repeat region, and we suggest that pathological methylation in this region is the epigenetic error that initiates H19 silencing.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  1999        PMID: 10506193     DOI: 10.1074/jbc.274.41.29331

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  26 in total

1.  A parent-of-origin detectable polymorphism in the hypermethylated region upstream of the human H19 gene.

Authors:  Nori Nakayashiki; Jun Kanetake; Yasuhiro Aoki
Journal:  Int J Legal Med       Date:  2004-02-13       Impact factor: 2.686

Review 2.  Wilms' tumour: a complex enigma to decipher.

Authors:  María José Robles-Frías; Michele Biscuola; María Angeles Castilla; María Angeles López-García; Felicia Sánchez-Gallego; José Palacios
Journal:  Clin Transl Oncol       Date:  2008-08       Impact factor: 3.405

3.  Dimethyl sulfoxide induces chemotherapeutic resistance in the treatment of testicular embryonal carcinomas.

Authors:  Hiroko Kita; Keisei Okamoto; Ryoji Kushima; Akihiro Kawauchi; Tokuhiro Chano
Journal:  Oncol Lett       Date:  2015-06-02       Impact factor: 2.967

4.  Quantitative high-throughput analysis of DNA methylation patterns by base-specific cleavage and mass spectrometry.

Authors:  Mathias Ehrich; Matthew R Nelson; Patrick Stanssens; Marc Zabeau; Triantafillos Liloglou; George Xinarianos; Charles R Cantor; John K Field; Dirk van den Boom
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2005-10-21       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  Microdeletion of target sites for insulator protein CTCF in a chromosome 11p15 imprinting center in Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome and Wilms' tumor.

Authors:  Dirk Prawitt; Thorsten Enklaar; Barbara Gärtner-Rupprecht; Christian Spangenberg; Monika Oswald; Ekkehart Lausch; Peter Schmidtke; Dirk Reutzel; Stephan Fees; Rob Lucito; Maria Korzon; Izabela Brozek; Janusz Limon; David E Housman; Jerry Pelletier; Bernhard Zabel
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2005-03-02       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 6.  An emerging understanding of long noncoding RNAs in kidney cancer.

Authors:  Shuigen Zhou; Jiandong Wang; Zhengyu Zhang
Journal:  J Cancer Res Clin Oncol       Date:  2014-05-11       Impact factor: 4.553

Review 7.  The importance of imprinting in the human placenta.

Authors:  Jennifer M Frost; Gudrun E Moore
Journal:  PLoS Genet       Date:  2010-07-01       Impact factor: 5.917

8.  Antisense transcript long noncoding RNA (lncRNA) HOTAIR is transcriptionally induced by estradiol.

Authors:  Arunoday Bhan; Imran Hussain; Khairul I Ansari; Sahba Kasiri; Aarti Bashyal; Subhrangsu S Mandal
Journal:  J Mol Biol       Date:  2013-01-31       Impact factor: 5.469

9.  Long non-coding RNA Linc00152 is a positive prognostic factor for and demonstrates malignant biological behavior in clear cell renal cell carcinoma.

Authors:  Yong Wu; Cong Tan; Wei-Wei Weng; Yu Deng; Qiong-Yan Zhang; Xiao-Qun Yang; Hua-Lei Gan; Tao Wang; Pei-Pei Zhang; Mi-Die Xu; Yi-Qin Wang; Chao-Fu Wang
Journal:  Am J Cancer Res       Date:  2016-01-15       Impact factor: 6.166

10.  Tumour-specific metabolic adaptation to acidosis is coupled to epigenetic stability in osteosarcoma cells.

Authors:  Tokuhiro Chano; Sofia Avnet; Katsuyuki Kusuzaki; Gloria Bonuccelli; Pierre Sonveaux; Dante Rotili; Antonello Mai; Nicola Baldini
Journal:  Am J Cancer Res       Date:  2016-03-15       Impact factor: 6.166

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.