| Literature DB >> 22408457 |
Massimo Mascolo1, Maria Siano1, Gennaro Ilardi1, Daniela Russo1, Francesco Merolla1, Gaetano De Rosa1,2, Stefania Staibano1.
Abstract
Squamous cell carcinoma of the oral region (OSCC) is one of the most common and highly aggressive malignancies worldwide, despite the fact that significant results have been achieved during the last decades in its detection, prevention and treatment. Although many efforts have been made to define the molecular signatures that identify the clinical outcome of oral cancers, OSCC still lacks reliable prognostic molecular markers. Scientific evidence indicates that transition from normal epithelium to pre-malignancy, and finally to oral carcinoma, depends on the accumulation of genetic and epigenetic alterations in a multistep process. Unlike genetic alterations, epigenetic changes are heritable and potentially reversible. The most common examples of such changes are DNA methylation, histone modification, and small non-coding RNAs. Although several epigenetic changes have been currently linked to OSCC initiation and progression, they have been only partially characterized. Over the last decade, it has been demonstrated that especially aberrant DNA methylation plays a critical role in oral cancer. The major goal of the present paper is to review the recent literature about the epigenetic modifications contribution in early and later phases of OSCC malignant transformation; in particular we point out the current evidence of epigenetic marks as novel markers for early diagnosis and prognosis as well as potential therapeutic targets in oral cancer.Entities:
Keywords: epigenetics; molecular therapy; oral cancer; prognosis; tumor progression
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22408457 PMCID: PMC3292026 DOI: 10.3390/ijms13022331
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
The most common epigenetic alterations.
| Epigenetic change | Putative mechanism | Biological consequence |
|---|---|---|
| DNA hypomethylation | Activation of cellular oncogenes | Increased proliferation, growth advantage |
| Activation of transposable element | Genomic instability, transcriptional noise | |
| DNA hypermethylation | De novo hypermethylation of CpG islands within gene promoters leading to silencing of tumor suppressors and cancer-associated genes | Genomic and chromosomal instability, increased proliferation, growth advantage |
| Loss of imprinting (LOI) | Reactivation of silent alleles, biallelic expression of imprinted genes | Expansion of precursor cell population |
| Relaxation of X-chromosome inactivation | Mechanisms is unknown but it appears to be age-related | Altered gene dosage, growth advantage |
| Histone acetylation | Gain-of-function | Activation of tumor promoting genes |
| Loss-of-function | Defects in DNA repair and checkpoints | |
| Histone deacetylation | Silencing of tumor suppressor genes | Genomic instability, increased proliferation |
| Histone methylation | Loss of heritable patterns of gene expression (“cellular memory”) | Genomic instability, growth advantage |
| MicroRNAs (miRNAs) amplification in cancer | Function as oncogenes | Neoplastic transformation |
| MicroRNAs (miRNAs) deletion in cancer | Function as tumor suppressors. | Neoplastic transformation |
The most common genes silenced from promoter methylation.
| Gene | Locus | Function | Alterations | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9q34 | Blood group antigen | Hypermethilation | ||
| 5q21 | Signal transduction | Hypermethilation | ||
| 11q22-q23 | Tumor suppressor | Hypermethilation | ||
| 19q13 | Tumor suppressor | Hypermethilation | ||
| 9p21 | Cell cycle | LOH, hypermethilation | ||
| 1q21 | Nuclear transcriptional regulator | Hypermethilation | ||
| 9q | Apoptosis | Hypermethilation | ||
| 18q21 | Tumor suppressor | Hypermethilation | ||
| 11p | Transcriptional regulator | Hypermethilation | ||
| 16q22 | Signal transduction | Hypermethilation | ||
| 13q22 | Signal transduction | Hypermethilation | ||
| 11q13 | Detoxification of carcinogens | Hypermethilation | ||
| 1q21.2 | Histone | Hypermethilation | ||
| 12p13 | Tumor suppressor | Hypermethilation | ||
| 3p21 | DNA repair | Hypermethilation | ||
| 9q33 | Transcriptional regulator | Hypermethilation | ||
| 10q26 | DNA repair | Hypermethilation | ||
| / | / | Hypermethilation | ||
| 1p21.3 | Tumor suppressor | Hypermethilation | ||
| 17q11.2 | Tumor suppressor | Hypermethilation | ||
| 21q22 | / | Hypermethilation | ||
| 9p21 | Apoptosis | LOH, hypermethilation | ||
| 9p21 | Cell cycle | LOH, deletion, mutation, hypermethilation | ||
| 9p21 | Cell cycle | LOH, mutation, deletion, hypermethilation | ||
| 17p13 | Tumor suppressor | Mutation, hypermethilation | ||
| 1p36 | Apoptosis | Hypermethilation | ||
| 10q23 | Tumor suppressor | Hypermethilation | ||
| 17q21 | Nuclear transcriptional Regulator | Hypermethilation | ||
| 3p21 | Apoptosis | Hypermethilation | ||
| 13q14 | Tumor suppressor | Hypermethilation, mutation | ||
| 1p36 | Transcriptional regulator | Hypermethilation | ||
| 8p11.21 | Transcriptional regulator | Hypometilation | ||
| 8p11.21 | Transcriptional regulator | Hypermethilation | ||
| 6q23-q24 | epithelial-mesenchymal interactions | Hypermethilation | ||
| 15q15 | cell-to-cell and cell-to-matrix interactions | Hypermethilation | ||
| 22q12 | epithelial-mesenchymal interactions | Hypermethilation | ||
| 12q14 | Transcriptional regulator | Hypermethilation | ||
| 1p36 | Signal transduction | Hypermethilation |
Deregulated miRNA in squamous cell carcinoma of the oral region (OSCC).
| Cellular function | microRNAs | Expression in OSCC |
|---|---|---|
| miR-137, miR-193a, miR-133a, miR-133b, miR-503, miR-15a | Down-regulated | |
| miR-21, miR-24 and miR-184 | Up-regulated | |
| miR-222 and miR-138 | Down-regulated | |
| miR-211 and miR-31 | Up-regulated | |
| miR-21 | Down-regulated | |
| miR-23a, miR-214, miR-98 | Up-regulated |
Figure 1A case of aggressive squamous cell carcinoma of tongue, Human Papillomavirus (HPV)-negative, showing a strong expression of chromatin Assembly Factor-1 (CAF-1)/p60. The patient experienced two local recurrences, nodal and distant metastases and died for disease in a period between 1 and 3 years from diagnosis. In the higher magnification you can note most nuclei of tumor cells strongly immunostained for the protein (1A: original magnification × 200; 1B: original magnification × 250).