| Literature DB >> 21738852 |
Josena K Stephen1, Dhananjay Chitale, Vinod Narra, Kang Mei Chen, Raja Sawhney, Maria J Worsham.
Abstract
Thyroid cancer is the most common endocrine cancer with 1,690 deaths each year. There are four main types of which the papillary and follicular types together account for >90% followed by medullary cancers with 3% to 5% and anaplastic carcinomas making up <3%. Epigenetic events of DNA hypermethylation are emerging as promising molecular targets for cancer detection. Our immediate and long term goal is to identify DNA methylation markers for early detection of thyroid cancer. This pilot study comprised of 21 patients to include 11 papillary thyroid cancers (PTC), 2 follicular thyroid cancers (FTC), 5 normal thyroid cases, and 3 hyperthyroid cases. Aberrant promoter methylation was examined in 24 tumor suppressor genes using the methylation specific multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MS-MLPA) assay and in the NIS gene using methylation-specific PCR (MSP). The frequently methylated genes were CASP8 (17/21), RASSF1 (16/21) and NIS (9/21). In the normal samples, CASP8, RASSF1 and NIS were methylated in 5/5, 4/5 and 1/5 respectively. In the hyperthyroid samples, CASP8, RASSF1 and NIS were methylated in 3/3, 2/3 and 1/3 respectively. In the thyroid cancers, CASP8, RASSF1, and NIS were methylated in 9/13, 10/13, and 7/13 respectively. CASP8, RASSF1 and NIS were also methylated in concurrently present normal thyroid tissue in 3/11, 4/11 and 3/11 matched thyroid cancer cases (matched for presence of both normal thyroid tissue and thyroid cancer), respectively. Our data suggests that aberrant methylation of CASP8, RASSF1, and NIS maybe an early change in thyroid tumorigenesis regardless of cell type.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21738852 PMCID: PMC3129708 DOI: 10.3390/cancers3021732
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1.(A) Normal control DNA sample with 41 individual peaks (red) in the absence of HhaI and 15 separate peaks (blue) in the presence of HhaI. (B) Normal thyroid sample with methylation of CASP8 and RASSF1. (C) Papillary thyroid cancer (Case 3 - tumor block) with methylation of CDKN2B and RASSF1. (D) Papillary thyroid cancer (Case 3 -normal block) with methylation of CASP8 and RASSF1. (PTC – papillary thyroid cancer, A1T – block A1 tumor, A6N – block A6 normal).
Figure 2.(A) Normal control DNA sample with 41 individual peaks (red) in the absence of HhaI and 15 separate peaks (blue) in the presence of HhaI. (B) Normal thyroid sample with methylation of CASP8 and RASSF1. (C) Follicular thyroid cancer (Case 13 - tumor block) with methylation of CASP8 and RASSF1. (D) Follicular thyroid cancer (Case 13 -normal block) with methylation of RASSF1. (FTC – follicular thyroid cancer, A5T – block A5 tumor, A9N – block A9 normal).
Methylation-Specific PCR (MSP) Primer Sequences for NIS gene.
| Forward | 5′-ATAGGGAGGTCGATACGGATATC | 5′-ATAGGGAGGTTGATATGGATATTGA | M-142 bp |
| Reverse | 5′-GAAAAAACAAAACGAAAAAAACG | 5′-AAAAAAACAAAACAAAAAAAACAAA | U-142 bp |
M = methylated product; U = unmethylated product
Figure 3.Aberrant methylation of NIS detected by methylation-specific PCR (MSP). Lanes 1 and 2: universal methylated and unmethylated controls. Lanes 3-14 span biopsies for Cases 3, 4 and 13. Note presence of methylated product in lanes 3, 7 and 9. Note absence of methylated product in lanes 5, 11 and 13. Lanes 15 and 16: negative control. (A1T – block A1 tumor, A6N – block A6 normal, B5Met – block B5 metastasis, Case4-N – normal thyroid, A5T – block A5 tumor, A9N – block A9 normal).