Literature DB >> 21368160

Transcriptionally repressed genes become aberrantly methylated and distinguish tumors of different lineages in breast cancer.

Duncan Sproul1, Colm Nestor, Jayne Culley, Jacqueline H Dickson, J Michael Dixon, David J Harrison, Richard R Meehan, Andrew H Sims, Bernard H Ramsahoye.   

Abstract

Aberrant promoter hypermethylation is frequently observed in cancer. The potential for this mechanism to contribute to tumor development depends on whether the genes affected are repressed because of their methylation. Many aberrantly methylated genes play important roles in development and are bivalently marked in ES cells, suggesting that their aberrant methylation may reflect developmental processes. We investigated this possibility by analyzing promoter methylation in 19 breast cancer cell lines and 47 primary breast tumors. In cell lines, we defined 120 genes that were significantly repressed in association with methylation (SRAM). These genes allowed the unsupervised segregation of cell lines into epithelial (EPCAM+ve) and mesenchymal (EPCAM-ve) lineages. However, the methylated genes were already repressed in normal cells of the same lineage, and >90% could not be derepressed by treatment with 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine. The tumor suppressor genes APC and CDH1 were among those methylated in a lineage-specific fashion. As predicted by the epithelial nature of most breast tumors, SRAM genes that were methylated in epithelial cell lines were frequently aberrantly methylated in primary tumors, as were genes specifically repressed in normal epithelial cells. An SRAM gene expression signature also correctly identified the rare claudin-low and metaplastic tumors as having mesenchymal characteristics. Our findings implicate aberrant DNA methylation as a marker of cell lineage rather than tumor progression and suggest that, in most cases, it does not cause the repression with which it is associated.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21368160      PMCID: PMC3060255          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1013224108

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  38 in total

1.  DNA methylation patterns in hereditary human cancers mimic sporadic tumorigenesis.

Authors:  M Esteller; M F Fraga; M Guo; J Garcia-Foncillas; I Hedenfalk; A K Godwin; J Trojan; C Vaurs-Barrière; Y J Bignon; S Ramus; J Benitez; T Caldes; Y Akiyama; Y Yuasa; V Launonen; M J Canal; R Rodriguez; G Capella; M A Peinado; A Borg; L A Aaltonen; B A Ponder; S B Baylin; J G Herman
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  2001-12-15       Impact factor: 6.150

2.  A gene hypermethylation profile of human cancer.

Authors:  M Esteller; P G Corn; S B Baylin; J G Herman
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2001-04-15       Impact factor: 12.701

3.  DNMT1 and DNMT3b cooperate to silence genes in human cancer cells.

Authors:  Ina Rhee; Kurtis E Bachman; Ben Ho Park; Kam-Wing Jair; Ray-Whay Chiu Yen; Kornel E Schuebel; Hengmi Cui; Andrew P Feinberg; Christoph Lengauer; Kenneth W Kinzler; Stephen B Baylin; Bert Vogelstein
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2002-04-04       Impact factor: 49.962

4.  Silenced tumor suppressor genes reactivated by DNA demethylation do not return to a fully euchromatic chromatin state.

Authors:  Kelly M McGarvey; Jill A Fahrner; Eriko Greene; Joost Martens; Thomas Jenuwein; Stephen B Baylin
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2006-04-01       Impact factor: 12.701

5.  Genome-scale DNA methylation maps of pluripotent and differentiated cells.

Authors:  Alexander Meissner; Tarjei S Mikkelsen; Hongcang Gu; Marius Wernig; Jacob Hanna; Andrey Sivachenko; Xiaolan Zhang; Bradley E Bernstein; Chad Nusbaum; David B Jaffe; Andreas Gnirke; Rudolf Jaenisch; Eric S Lander
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2008-07-06       Impact factor: 49.962

6.  Molecular characterization of the tumor microenvironment in breast cancer.

Authors:  Minna Allinen; Rameen Beroukhim; Li Cai; Cameron Brennan; Jaana Lahti-Domenici; Haiyan Huang; Dale Porter; Min Hu; Lynda Chin; Andrea Richardson; Stuart Schnitt; William R Sellers; Kornelia Polyak
Journal:  Cancer Cell       Date:  2004-07       Impact factor: 31.743

7.  Infiltrating leukocytes confound the detection of E-cadherin promoter methylation in tumors.

Authors:  Marcel Lombaerts; Janneke W Middeldorp; Esther van der Weide; Katja Philippo; Tom van Wezel; Vincent T H B M Smit; Cees J Cornelisse; Anne-Marie Cleton-Jansen
Journal:  Biochem Biophys Res Commun       Date:  2004-06-25       Impact factor: 3.575

8.  Characterization of a naturally occurring breast cancer subset enriched in epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition and stem cell characteristics.

Authors:  Bryan T Hennessy; Ana-Maria Gonzalez-Angulo; Katherine Stemke-Hale; Michael Z Gilcrease; Savitri Krishnamurthy; Ju-Seog Lee; Jane Fridlyand; Aysegul Sahin; Roshan Agarwal; Corwin Joy; Wenbin Liu; David Stivers; Keith Baggerly; Mark Carey; Ana Lluch; Carlos Monteagudo; Xiaping He; Victor Weigman; Cheng Fan; Juan Palazzo; Gabriel N Hortobagyi; Laura K Nolden; Nicholas J Wang; Vicente Valero; Joe W Gray; Charles M Perou; Gordon B Mills
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2009-05-12       Impact factor: 12.701

9.  E-cadherin expression in primary carcinomas of the breast and its distant metastases.

Authors:  Paul J Kowalski; Mark A Rubin; Celina G Kleer
Journal:  Breast Cancer Res       Date:  2003-09-26       Impact factor: 6.466

10.  Expression profiling of purified normal human luminal and myoepithelial breast cells: identification of novel prognostic markers for breast cancer.

Authors:  Chris Jones; Alan Mackay; Anita Grigoriadis; Antonio Cossu; Jorge S Reis-Filho; Laura Fulford; Tim Dexter; Susan Davies; Karen Bulmer; Emily Ford; Suzanne Parry; Mario Budroni; Giuseppe Palmieri; A Munro Neville; Michael J O'Hare; Sunil R Lakhani
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2004-05-01       Impact factor: 12.701

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  82 in total

1.  Prognostic significance of gene-specific promoter hypermethylation in breast cancer patients.

Authors:  Yoon Hee Cho; Jing Shen; Marilie D Gammon; Yu-Jing Zhang; Qiao Wang; Karina Gonzalez; Xinran Xu; Patrick T Bradshaw; Susan L Teitelbaum; Gail Garbowski; Hanina Hibshoosh; Alfred I Neugut; Jia Chen; Regina M Santella
Journal:  Breast Cancer Res Treat       Date:  2011-08-12       Impact factor: 4.872

2.  NLRC5/MHC class I transactivator is a target for immune evasion in cancer.

Authors:  Sayuri Yoshihama; Jason Roszik; Isaac Downs; Torsten B Meissner; Saptha Vijayan; Bjoern Chapuy; Tabasum Sidiq; Margaret A Shipp; Gregory A Lizee; Koichi S Kobayashi
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2016-05-09       Impact factor: 11.205

3.  Altered promoter nucleosome positioning is an early event in gene silencing.

Authors:  Luke B Hesson; Mathew A Sloane; Jason Wh Wong; Andrea C Nunez; Sameer Srivastava; Benedict Ng; Nicholas J Hawkins; Michael J Bourke; Robyn L Ward
Journal:  Epigenetics       Date:  2014-10       Impact factor: 4.528

4.  Genomics: ENCODE explained.

Authors:  Joseph R Ecker; Wendy A Bickmore; Inês Barroso; Jonathan K Pritchard; Yoav Gilad; Eran Segal
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2012-09-06       Impact factor: 49.962

5.  Longitudinal Analysis of DNA Methylation in CD34+ Hematopoietic Progenitors in Myelodysplastic Syndrome.

Authors:  Yan-Fung Wong; Chris N Micklem; Masataka Taguchi; Hidehiro Itonaga; Yasushi Sawayama; Daisuke Imanishi; Shinichi Nishikawa; Yasushi Miyazaki; Lars Martin Jakt
Journal:  Stem Cells Transl Med       Date:  2014-08-13       Impact factor: 6.940

6.  DNA methylation does not stably lock gene expression but instead serves as a molecular mark for gene silencing memory.

Authors:  Noël J-M Raynal; Jiali Si; Rodolphe F Taby; Vazganush Gharibyan; Saira Ahmed; Jaroslav Jelinek; Marcos R H Estécio; Jean-Pierre J Issa
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2012-01-04       Impact factor: 12.701

7.  Reduced aquaporin-1 transcript expression in colorectal carcinoma is associated with promoter hypermethylation.

Authors:  Eric Smith; Yoko Tomita; Helen M Palethorpe; Stuart Howell; Maryam Nakhjavani; Amanda R Townsend; Timothy J Price; Joanne P Young; Jennifer E Hardingham
Journal:  Epigenetics       Date:  2019-02-20       Impact factor: 4.528

8.  The DNA methylation landscape of human melanoma.

Authors:  Seung-Gi Jin; Wenying Xiong; Xiwei Wu; Lu Yang; Gerd P Pfeifer
Journal:  Genomics       Date:  2015-09-15       Impact factor: 5.736

Review 9.  Epigenetic Determinants of Cancer.

Authors:  Stephen B Baylin; Peter A Jones
Journal:  Cold Spring Harb Perspect Biol       Date:  2016-09-01       Impact factor: 10.005

10.  Comparative genome-wide DNA methylation analysis of colorectal tumor and matched normal tissues.

Authors:  Femke Simmer; Arie B Brinkman; Yassen Assenov; Filomena Matarese; Anita Kaan; Lina Sabatino; Alberto Villanueva; Dori Huertas; Manel Esteller; Thomas Lengauer; Christoph Bock; Vittorio Colantuoni; Lucia Altucci; Hendrik G Stunnenberg
Journal:  Epigenetics       Date:  2012-10-18       Impact factor: 4.528

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