Literature DB >> 21709441

Epigenetic fingerprint in endometrial carcinogenesis: the hypothesis of a uterine field cancerization.

Marina Di Domenico1, Angela Santoro, Carmela Ricciardi, Mirella Iaccarino, Stefania Iaccarino, Mariagrazia Freda, Antonia Feola, Francesca Sanguedolce, Simona Losito, Daniela Pasquali, Attilio Di Spiezio Sardo, Giuseppe Bifulco, Carmine Nappi, Pantaleo Bufo, Maurizio Guida, Gaetano De Rosa, Alberto Abbruzzese, Michele Caraglia, Giuseppe Pannone.   

Abstract

Transcriptional silencing by CpG island hypermethylation plays a critical role in endometrial carcinogenesis. In a collection of benign, premalignant and malignant endometrial lesions, a methylation profile of a complete gene panel, such steroid receptors (ERα, PR), DNA mismatch repair (hMLH1), tumor-suppressor genes (CDKN2A/P16 and CDH1/E-CADHERIN) and WNT pathway inhibitors (SFRP1, SFRP2, SFRP4, SFRP5) was investigated in order to demonstrate their pathogenetic role in endometrial lesions. Our results indicate that gene hypermethylation may be an early event in endometrial endometrioid tumorigenesis. Particularly, ERα, PR, hMLH1, CDKN2A/P16, SFRP1, SFRP2 and SFRP5 revealed a promoter methylation status in endometrioid carcinoma, whereas SFRP4 showed demethylation in cancer. P53 immunostaining showed weak-focal protein expression level both in hyperplasic lesions and in endometrioid cancer. Non-endometrioid cancers showed very low levels of epigenetic methylations, but strong P53 protein positivity. Fisher exact test revealed a statistically significant association between hMLH1, CDKN2A/P16 and SFRP1 genes methylation and endometrioid carcinomas and between hMLH1 gene methylation and peritumoral endometrium (p < 0.05). Our data confirm that the methylation profile of the peritumoral endometrium is different from the altered molecular background of benign endometrial polyps and hyperplasias. Therefore, our findings suggest that the methylation of hMLH1, CDKN2A/P16 and SFRP1 may clearly distinguish between benign and malignant lesions. Finally, this study assessed that the use of an epigenetic fingerprint may improve the current diagnostic tools for a better clinical management of endometrial lesions.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21709441     DOI: 10.4161/cbt.12.5.15963

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer Biol Ther        ISSN: 1538-4047            Impact factor:   4.742


  11 in total

1.  hMLH1 promoter hypermethylation and MSI status in human endometrial carcinomas with and without metastases.

Authors:  J Bischoff; A Ignatov; A Semczuk; C Schwarzenau; T Ignatov; T Krebs; D Küster; D Przadka-Rabaniuk; A Roessner; S D Costa; R Schneider-Stock
Journal:  Clin Exp Metastasis       Date:  2012-05-03       Impact factor: 5.150

2.  Aberrant promoter hypermethylation of p16 gene in endometrial carcinoma.

Authors:  Zhuo-ying Hu; Liang-dan Tang; Qin Zhou; Lin Xiao; Yi Cao
Journal:  Tumour Biol       Date:  2015-01-17

Review 3.  Candidate biomarkers for genetic and clinicopathological diagnosis of endometrial cancer.

Authors:  Kouji Banno; Yuya Nogami; Iori Kisu; Megumi Yanokura; Kiyoko Umene; Kenta Masuda; Yusuke Kobayashi; Wataru Yamagami; Nobuyuki Susumu; Daisuke Aoki
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2013-06-06       Impact factor: 5.923

4.  Over-Expression of the LH Receptor Increases Distant Metastases in an Endometrial Cancer Mouse Model.

Authors:  Serena Pillozzi; Angelo Fortunato; Emanuele De Lorenzo; Elena Borrani; Massimo Giachi; Gianfranco Scarselli; Annarosa Arcangeli; Ivo Noci
Journal:  Front Oncol       Date:  2013-11-19       Impact factor: 6.244

5.  Myofibroblast-derived SFRP1 as potential inhibitor of colorectal carcinoma field effect.

Authors:  Gábor Valcz; Arpád V Patai; Alexandra Kalmár; Bálint Péterfia; István Fűri; Barnabás Wichmann; Györgyi Műzes; Ferenc Sipos; Tibor Krenács; Emese Mihály; Sándor Spisák; Béla Molnár; Zsolt Tulassay
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-11-18       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 6.  Signal transduction growth factors: the effective governance of transcription and cellular adhesion in cancer invasion.

Authors:  Marina Di Domenico; Antonio Giordano
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2017-05-30

Review 7.  What influences preneoplastic colorectal lesion recurrence?

Authors:  Giulia De Maio; Elisa Zama; Claudia Rengucci; Daniele Calistri
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2017-02-14

8.  Promoter methylation of tumor suppressor genes in pre-neoplastic lesions; potential marker of disease recurrence.

Authors:  Claudia Rengucci; Giulia De Maio; Andrea Casadei Gardini; Mattia Zucca; Emanuela Scarpi; Chiara Zingaretti; Giovanni Foschi; Maria Maddalena Tumedei; Chiara Molinari; Luca Saragoni; Maurizio Puccetti; Dino Amadori; Wainer Zoli; Daniele Calistri
Journal:  J Exp Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2014-08-05

9.  Assessing sirtuin expression in endometrial carcinoma and non-neoplastic endometrium.

Authors:  Carla Bartosch; Sara Monteiro-Reis; Diogo Almeida-Rios; Renata Vieira; Armando Castro; Manuel Moutinho; Marta Rodrigues; Inês Graça; José Manuel Lopes; Carmen Jerónimo
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2016-01-12

10.  Identification of Key Candidate Genes and Pathways in Endometrial Cancer by Integrated Bioinformatical Analysis

Authors:  Lihong Liu; Fangxu Chen; Aihui Xiu; Bo Du; Hao Ai; Wei Xie
Journal:  Asian Pac J Cancer Prev       Date:  2018-04-25
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