| Literature DB >> 21559209 |
Karen Curtin1, Martha L Slattery, Wade S Samowitz.
Abstract
The concept of a CpG island methylator phenotype, or CIMP, quickly became the focus of several colorectal cancer studies describing its clinical and pathological features after its introduction in 1999 by Toyota and colleagues. Further characterization of CIMP in tumors lead to widespread acceptance of the concept, as expressed by Shen and Issa in their 2005 editorial, "CIMP, at last." Since that time, extensive research efforts have brought great insights into the epidemiology and prognosis of CIMP+ tumors and other epigenetic mechanisms underlying tumorigenesis. With the advances in technology and subsequent cataloging of the human methylome in cancer and normal tissue, new directions in research to understand CIMP and its role in complex biological systems yield hope for future epigenetically based diagnostics and treatments.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21559209 PMCID: PMC3090226 DOI: 10.4061/2011/902674
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patholog Res Int ISSN: 2042-003X
Figure 1In colorectal cancer, CIMP+ occurs more frequently in tumors of the proximal colon (Figure 1(a)) and less frequently in tumors of the distal colon and rectum (Figure 1(b)). An approximate distribution of genetic and epigenetic tumor alterations is shown.
A history of CIMP panels used to assess CpG island methylation in colorectal cancer.
| Study | CIMP panel markers | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Toyota et al. [ |
| Pioneering work to identify markers that distinguish CIMP from age-related methylation |
| Park et al. [ |
| So-called “classic” or traditional panel |
| Weisenberger et al. [ |
| “New” panel based on stepwise screen of 195 markers |
| Ogino et al. [ |
| Selected markers to distinguish high-level from low-level methylation |
| Shen et al. [ | CIMP1: MINT1, | Examined 27 CpG sites, proposed optimal epigenetic and genetic markers to identify CIMP1, CIMP2, or CIMP- |
| Tanaka et al. [ |
| Correlation structures of markers and CIMP differ by |
| Ang et al. [ | Total of 202 CpG sites differentially methylated between tumor and normal | Comprehensive DNA methylation profiling in 807 cancer genes |
| Kaneda and Yagi [ | Group 1: | Comprehensive DNA epigenotyping of genomewide regions indentified two groups (high and intermediate to low methylation) |
Figure 2A decade of epigenetic research in colorectal cancer (CRC) has led to widespread recognition and acceptance of the CpG Island Methylator Phenotype.