Literature DB >> 16575877

Microarray-based survey of CpG islands identifies concurrent hyper- and hypomethylation patterns in tissues derived from patients with breast cancer.

Arkadiusz Piotrowski1, Magdalena Benetkiewicz, Uwe Menzel, Teresita Díaz de Ståhl, Kiran Mantripragada, Gintautas Grigelionis, Patrick G Buckley, Michał Jankowski, Jacek Hoffman, Dariusz Bała, Ewa Srutek, Ryszard Laskowski, Wojciech Zegarski, Jan P Dumanski.   

Abstract

Maintenance of CpG island methylation in the genome is crucial for cellular homeostasis and this balance is disrupted in cancer. Our rationale was to compare the methylation of CpG islands in tissues (tumor, healthy breast and blood) from patients with breast cancer. We studied 72 genes in 103 samples using microarray hybridization and bisulfite sequencing. We observed tumor specific hyper- or hypomethylation of five genes; COL9A1, MT1A, MT1J, HOXA5 and FLJ45983. A general drop of methylation in COL9A1 was apparent in tumors, when compared with blood and healthy breast tissue. Furthermore, one tumor displayed a complete loss of methylation of all five genes, suggesting overall impairment of methylation. The downstream, evolutionary conserved island of HOXA5 showed hypomethylation in 18 tumors and complete methylation in others. This CpG island also displayed a semimethylated state in the majority of normal breast samples, when compared to complete methylation in blood. Distinct methylation patterns were further seen in MT1J and MT1A, belonging to the metallothionein gene family. The CpG islands of these genes are spaced by 2 kb, which shows selective methylation of two structurally and functionally related genes. The promoters of FLJ45983 and MT1A were methylated above 25% in 18 primary and metastatic tumors. Concurrently, there was also >10% methylation of healthy breast tissue in 11 and 5 samples, respectively. This suggests that the methylation process for the latter two genes takes place already in normal breast cells. Our results also point to a considerable heterogeneity of epigenetic disturbance in breast cancer. This article contains Supplementary Material available at http://www.interscience.wiley.com/jpages/1045-2257/suppmat. (c) 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16575877     DOI: 10.1002/gcc.20331

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Genes Chromosomes Cancer        ISSN: 1045-2257            Impact factor:   5.006


  14 in total

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Review 2.  DNA microarrays: a powerful genomic tool for biomedical and clinical research.

Authors:  Victor Trevino; Francesco Falciani; Hugo A Barrera-Saldaña
Journal:  Mol Med       Date:  2007 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 6.354

3.  A Robust Unified Approach to Analyzing Methylation and Gene Expression Data.

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Journal:  Comput Stat Data Anal       Date:  2009-03-15       Impact factor: 1.681

4.  A Targeted Proteomics Approach for Screening Serum Biomarkers Observed in the Early Stage of Type I Endometrial Cancer.

Authors:  Blendi Ura; Valeria Capaci; Michelangelo Aloisio; Giovanni Di Lorenzo; Federico Romano; Giuseppe Ricci; Lorenzo Monasta
Journal:  Biomedicines       Date:  2022-08-02

5.  DNA methylation profile of 28 potential marker loci in malignant mesothelioma.

Authors:  Jeffrey A Tsou; Janice S Galler; Anil Wali; Wei Ye; Kimberly D Siegmund; Susan Groshen; Peter W Laird; Sally Turla; Michael N Koss; Harvey I Pass; Ite A Laird-Offringa
Journal:  Lung Cancer       Date:  2007-07-30       Impact factor: 5.705

6.  Methylation of homeobox genes is a frequent and early epigenetic event in breast cancer.

Authors:  Stella Tommasi; Deborah L Karm; Xiwei Wu; Yun Yen; Gerd P Pfeifer
Journal:  Breast Cancer Res       Date:  2009-02-27       Impact factor: 6.466

7.  Gamma-Normal-Gamma mixture model for detecting differentially methylated loci in three breast cancer cell lines.

Authors:  Abbas Khalili; Dustin Potter; Pearlly Yan; Lang Li; Joe Gray; Tim Huang; Shili Lin
Journal:  Cancer Inform       Date:  2007-02-07

8.  LINE-1 hypomethylation in cancer is highly variable and inversely correlated with microsatellite instability.

Authors:  Marcos R H Estécio; Vazganush Gharibyan; Lanlan Shen; Ashraf E K Ibrahim; Ketan Doshi; Rong He; Jaroslav Jelinek; Allen S Yang; Pearlly S Yan; Tim H-M Huang; Eloiza H Tajara; Jean-Pierre J Issa
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2007-05-02       Impact factor: 3.240

9.  Putative zinc finger protein binding sites are over-represented in the boundaries of methylation-resistant CpG islands in the human genome.

Authors:  Shicai Fan; Fang Fang; Xuegong Zhang; Michael Q Zhang
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2007-11-21       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  Evaluation of a functional epigenetic approach to identify promoter region methylation in phaeochromocytoma and neuroblastoma.

Authors:  Caroline D E Margetts; Mark Morris; Dewi Astuti; Dean C Gentle; Alberto Cascon; Fiona E McRonald; Daniel Catchpoole; Mercedes Robledo; Hartmut P H Neumann; Farida Latif; Eamonn R Maher
Journal:  Endocr Relat Cancer       Date:  2008-05-22       Impact factor: 5.678

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