| Literature DB >> 16248899 |
Alfonso Dueñas-González1, Marcela Lizano, Myrna Candelaria, Lucely Cetina, Claudia Arce, Eduardo Cervera.
Abstract
Cervical cancer remains one of the greatest killers of women worldwide. It is difficult to foresee a dramatic increase in cure rate even with the most optimal combination of cytotoxic drugs, surgery, and radiation; therefore, testing of molecular targeted therapies against this malignancy is highly desirable. A number of epigenetic alterations occur during all stages of cervical carcinogenesis in both human papillomavirus and host cellular genomes, which include global DNA hypomethylation, hypermetylation of key tumor suppressor genes, and histone modifications. The reversible nature of epigenetic changes constitutes a target for transcriptional therapies, namely DNA methylation and histone deacetylase inhibitors. To date, studies in patients with cervical cancer have demonstrated the feasibility of reactivating the expression of hypermethylated and silenced tumor suppressor genes as well as the hyperacetylating and inhibitory effect upon histone deacetylase activity in tumor tissues after treatment with demethylating and histone deacetylase inhibitors. In addition, detection of epigenetic changes in cytological smears, serum DNA, and peripheral blood are of potential interest for development of novel biomolecular markers for early detection, prediction of response, and prognosis.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 16248899 PMCID: PMC1291396 DOI: 10.1186/1476-4598-4-38
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cancer ISSN: 1476-4598 Impact factor: 27.401
Main epigenetic alterations in cervical cancer
| Methylation of HPV-E2 binding sites | De-repression of E6 and E7 HPV oncoproeteins? |
| Methyation at HPV-E6 and E7 LCR | Cause or consequence of E6/E7 over-expression? |
| E6 and/or E7 interaction with DNMTs? | Silencing of cellular tumor suppressor genes? |
| Interaction between E7 with HDACs | Aid for cell transformation |
| Interaction between E6 with HATs | Aid for cell transformation |
| Regional DNA hypermethylation | Silencing of tumor suppressor genes |
| Global DNA hypomethylation | Genomic instability?, oncogen over-expression? |
| Abnormal pattern of chromatin | Unknown |
| Loss of imprinting at H19/IGF2 loci | Tumor progression? |
| H3 hyper-phosphorylation & acetylation | Associated with carcinogenesis Progression |
Tumor suppressor genes hypermethylated in invasive cervical cancer
| DcR1/DcR2 | 100% | Apoptosis | 113 |
| hTERT | 57% | Apoptosis | 122 |
| p73 | 39% | Apoptosis | 129 |
| p16 | 8–42% | Cell-cycle | 130–136 |
| PTEN | 58% | WNT-pathway | 142 |
| E-cadherin | 28–80.5% | WNT-pathway | 143–145 |
| APC | 11–94% | WNT-pathway | 133,135,136 |
| MGMT | 5–81% | DNA repair | 133,134,136,144 |
| FANCF | 30% | FA-BRAC pathway | 161 |
| BRAC1 | 6.1% | FA-BRAC pathway | 133 |
| hMLH1 | 5% | Mismatch repair | 134 |
| RASSF1A | 0–45% | Negative ras-effector | 144,172–174 |
| DAPK | 45–100% | Metastasis/cell death | 133,135,136,144 |
| TSLC1 | 58–65% | Tumor suppressor | 179,180 |
| FHIT | 11–88% | DNA repair?/cell death? | 133,134,135,136,144 |
| HIC1 | 18–45% | Transcription factor | 133,135 |
| RARβ | 33–66% | Cell differentiation | 133,136,200,201 |
| TIMP2/TIMP3 | 47%/1–10% | Tissue inhibitor MTs | 144,202,203 |
| Caveolin-1 | 6% | Caveolae membrane | 205 |
| ER α | 25% | Steroid hormone receptor | 136 |
Translational opportunities from epigenetic alterations in cervical cancer
| Early detection | Identification of a set of hypermethylated genes from cytological smears |
| Prognostic/predictive | Determination of global methylation or histone modifications in tumor or peripheral blood cells Determination of hypermethylated gene promoters from serum/plasma DNA |
| Therapy | DNA methylation inhibitors and/or HDACs inhibitors alone or as chemo- or radio-sensitizers |
Epigenetic therapy agents
Main findings of epigenetic therapy in cervical cancer
| Lack of response to DNA methylation inhibitor 5-aza-2-deoxycytidine as a single agent in advanced or recurrent cervical cancer* |
| Response rate of 38.1% with the DNA methylation inhibitor 5-aza-2-deoxycytidine plus cisplatin in advanced or recurrent cervical cancer* |
| Demethylation and reactivation of the expression of several tumor suppressor genes in the tumors of cervical cancer patients in a phase I trial of the DNA methylation inhibitor hydralazine |
| Sustained stabilization of disease in a patient with cervical cancer treated within a phase I trial of the HDAC inhibitor MS-275 |
| Major response in a patient with cervical cancer being treated with the HDAC inhibitor valproic acid followed by a single dose of epirubicin within a phase I trial |
| H3 and H4 hyperacetylation as well as inhibition of deacetylase activity in the tumors of cervical cancer patients with cervical cancer in a phase I trial of the HDAC inhibitor magnesium valproate |
| Ongoing phase II trial of the combination of hydralazine and magnesium valproate added to cisplatin chemoradiation in FIGO stage IIIB patients |
*DNA methylation was not analyzed in these trials.