| Literature DB >> 22704268 |
Samir Kumar Patra, Moonmoon Deb, Aditi Patra.
Abstract
UNLABELLED: Epigenetic regulations of genes by reversible methylation of DNA (at the carbon-5 of cytosine) and numerous reversible modifications of histones play important roles in normal physiology and development, and epigenetic deregulations are associated with developmental disorders and various disease states, including cancer. Stem cells have the capacity to self-renew indefinitely. Similar to stem cells, some malignant cells have the capacity to divide indefinitely and are referred to as cancer stem cells. In recent times, direct correlation between epigenetic modifications and reprogramming of stem cell and cancer stem cell is emerging. Major discoveries were made with investigations on reprogramming gene products, also known as master regulators of totipotency and inducer of pluoripotency, namely, OCT4, NANOG, cMYC, SOX2, Klf4, and LIN28. The challenge to induce pluripotency is the insertion of four reprogramming genes (Oct4, Sox2, Klf4, and c-Myc) into the genome. There are always risks of silencing of these genes by epigenetic modifications in the host cells, particularly, when introduced through retroviral techniques. In this contribution, we will discuss some of the major discoveries on epigenetic modifications within the chromatin of various genes associated with cancer progression and cancer stem cells in comparison to normal development of stem cell. These modifications may be considered as molecular signatures for predicting disorders of development and for identifying disease states. ELECTRONIC SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL: The online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s13148-010-0016-0) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 22704268 PMCID: PMC3365374 DOI: 10.1007/s13148-010-0016-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Epigenetics ISSN: 1868-7075 Impact factor: 6.551
Scheme 1Levels of stem-cell state
Molecular signatures observed on chromatin in normal and cancer cells
| Epigenetic changes | Chromatin modification observed in normal cell | Modification observed in cancer cell | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type of modification on respective gene | Effect of modification | Reference | Type of cancer | Type of modification on respective gene | Reference | |
| DNA methylation | In hESCs, cancer-related genes, including tumor suppressor genes, are repressed by the establishment of “bivalent chromatin domains” consisting of activating (H3 lysine 27 methylation) and repressing (H3 lysine 4 methylation) histone marks that make them poised for activation. | Balance those gene expression or suppression. | (Schlesinger et al. | Adult cancer cell | In adult cancer cell, the promoter region of the gene immediately hypermethylated and fully stopped them from activation. | (Schlesinger et al. |
| Class A-I (genes are primarily involved in early differentiation processes and more enriched in Polycomb and bivalent marks) cancer-related genes were not hypermethylated in hESC and normal tissue. | Regulation of normal developmetal process | (Calvanese et al. | Adult cancer cell. | Class-I genes were hypermethylated in adult cancer cell. | (Calvanese et al. | |
| Class A-II genes were sometimes methylated in normal tissue but uncommon in hESC. | Methylation may be important for linage specification | (Calvanese et al. | Cancer cell | These genes were frequently methylated in cancer cell line and it became abnormal when it was not hypermethylated in the corresponding normal tissue. | (Calvanese et al. | |
| Promoter region of Class B-I genes (excluding ASCL2, NPY, and SLC5A8 genes) are frequently hypermethylated in hESCs cells lines but never in normal tissues. | DNA methylation maintain pluripotency in cancer sten cell and hESC. | (Calvanese et al. | cancer cell | Class B-I gene are also hypermethylated in cancer stem-cell line and responsible for their pluripotency. | (Calvanese et al. | |
| Class B-II genes(associated with those linked to lineage specification) are often hypermethylated in hESCs and sometimes methylated in normal tissues | Important for linage specification | (Calvanese et al. | Cancer cell | These genes are also hypermethylated in cancer cell line. Their hypermethylation in cancer were considered aberrant in tumor types when the related gene is completely unmethylated in the normal cell. | (Calvanese et al. | |
| AIM2 and RUNX3, that were hypermethylated and repressed in CD34+ hematopoietic progenitor cells and that became unmethylated and overexpressed in myeloid and lymphoid lineages, respectively | Maintain linage specification | (Li et al. | Gastric cancer, colon cancer | Hemizygous deletion and hypermethylation in the promoter region of RUNX3 gene was observed in gastric cancer and in colon cancer promoter region of AIM2 was hypermethylated. | (Li et al. | |
| Stat3 and Tcf3 binding site on the upstream (−4,880 to −3,790 bp) of Nanog gene is hypomethylated in ES | (Hattori et al. | |||||
| Gcnf binding site on upstream (−2,050 to −1,800 bp) is hypermethylated in ES | (Hattori et al. | |||||
| Six proximal CpG site of Oct-4, Sox2 and p53 regulator binding site in nenog gene (−1 to −1,000) is completely unmethylate and another ten distal CpG site is 29% methylated. | Activate Nanog expression | (Kuroda et al. | ||||
| Oct-4 gene regulatory region displays quite a unique DNA methylation pattern regulated by specific | Expression control of the gene | (Hattori et al. | ||||
| the SOX2 protein is expressed in normal gastric mucosae | Inhibited cell proliferation through cell-cycle (G1) arrest and apoptosis | (Otsubo et al. | Gastric cancer | Half of the case of gastric cancer (three out of six) promoter region of Sox2 gene is hypermethylated and lowering the expression of SOX2 protein. | (Otsubo et al. | |
| The sex-determining region Y-box 7 (Sox7) normally express in embryonic stem cell and some differentiated depend on cell type | Is a transcription factor, essential for embryonic development and endoderm differentiation | Prostate adenocarcinomas and primary prostate tumors | A study shows that in 47% of the prostate adenocarcinomas and 48% of the primary prostate tumors SOX7 gene were downregulated through promoter hypermethylation . | (Guo et al. | ||
| Lung carcinoma | SOX7, SOX18 promoter region methylated in lung carcinoma. | (Dammann et al. | ||||
| Colorectal cancer | SOX17 promoter region hypermethylated in colorectal cancer. | (Zhang et al. | ||||
| The sex-determining region Y-box 7 (Sox7) normally express in embryonic stem cell and some differentiated depend on cell type | Colorectal cancer | Sox7 promoter region is hypermethylated in colorectal cancer | (Zhang et al. | |||
| sFRPs and DKK1 as secreted Wnt antagonists acting at cell membrane to prevent ligand-receptor interactions and APC degrade b-catenin or export b-catenin from the nuclear to cytoplasm | Colorectal cancer | Promoter hypermethylation occurs at sFRPs, DKK1, and APC genes, which are key genes in colorectal cancer development. | (Caldwell et al. | |||
| In normal embryonic ureteal and bladder cell, only the sixth binding site of CTCF insulator protein on the promoter region of human H19 gene is allele-specific methylation. | Controlled the normal expression of H19 gene | (Takai et al. | Bladder cancer | Aberrant hypomethylation observed at sixth CTCF binding site in parenal allele causes overexperssion of H19. | (Takai et al. | |
| Allele-specific normal methylation pattern at the sixth CTCF binding site at H19 promoter region in normal cell. | Controlled the normal expression of H19 gene | (Takai et al. | Wilms' tumor and colon cancer | Hypermethylation occur at sixth CTCF binding site in maternal allele. | (Takai et al. | |
| Allele-specific normal methylation pattern at the sixth CTCF binding site at H19 promoter region in normal cell. | Controlled the normal expression of H19 gene | (Takai et al. | Lung cancer | Hypomethylation of that site and biallelic expression of H19 gene observe | (Takai et al. | |
| In normal squamous cell, repetitive sequence classes including SINEs, LINEs, subtelomeric repeats, and segmental duplications are hypermethylated. | (Pfeifer and Rauch | Squamous cell tumors | In squamous cell tumors, repetitive DNA sequences are hypomethylated at CpG island. | (Pfeifer and Rauch | ||
| (Pfeifer and Rauch | Multiple methylated CpG islands present in four | (Pfeifer and Rauch | ||||
| The | Tumor suppressor gene | (Hagiwara et al. | Lymphocytic leukemia and lung cancer | DNA methylation inactive this tumor suppressor gene. | (Hagiwara et al. | |
| DNMT3L promoter region is methylated in normal differentiated cell. | (Gokul et al. | Squamous cell carcinoma of cervix and cervical cancer cell | Loss of DNA methylation at the DNMT3L promoter region observe in this cancer cell. Overexpression of DNMT3L regulates DNMT3A and DNMT3B activity which result into cell proliferation and induce independent growth | (Gokul et al. | ||
| Hypermethylation not observed in normal placenta. | (Zhang et al. | Choriocarcinoma. seminoma and embryonal carcinoma | Minimal promoter and exon 1 regions of Oct4 are both hypermethylated in choriocarcinoma. In gonadal germ cell tumors, specifically seminoma and embryonal carcinoma Oct4 expression become lower. | (Zhang et al. | ||
| Histone modification | The level of H3-K9 and H3-K27 methylation of the Nanog proximal and distal tissue specific differentially methylated regions (T-DMR) is low in ICM cells then TE cells and differentiated cell. | Activate nanog expression in ES cell | (Hattori et al. | |||
| H3-K4 trimethylation and H3-K4 dimethylation level is high at the | Assist chromatin relaxation in ICM | (Hattori et al. | ||||
| H3-K9 and H3-K27 methylation of Oct4 gene T-DMR is low in both ES and TS cell compare to nanog gene | H3-K9 and H3-K27 is not more important for Oct4 gene expression | (Hattori et al. | ||||
| H3-K4 tri- and di-methylation level is high at the Oct-4 gene T-DMR in ICM then TE cells | Assist chromatin relaxation in ICM | (Hattori et al. | ||||
| In normal cell early growth response 1 (EGR1) gene, inhibition is not observed. | EGR1 gene expressed. | (Lubieniecka et al. | Synovial sarcoma | In these cancer cells, H3K27me3 modification and polycomb group protein recruitment occur at the promoter region of the tumor suppressor gene EGR1 by the SS18-SSX protein. | 137 | |
| In ESCs, Nanog gene H3 and H4 is hyperactylated in the proximal and distal T-DMR then differentiated cell | Nanog expression ES cell | (Hattori et al. | ||||
| H3 and H4 is also hyperacetylated in Oct4 gene upstream region. | Nanog expression ES cell | (Hattori et al. | ||||
| The SOX2 protein is expressed in normal gastric mucosae | Inhibited cell proliferation through cell-cycle (G1) arrest and apoptosis | (Otsubo et al. | Gastric cancer | Some SOX2 expression-negative cases did not show any DNA methylation but they re-establish SOX2 expression after treatment with a histone deacetylase inhibitor TSA in gastric cancer cell line MKN7. It may represent that histone modification also involves in SOX2 expression. | (Otsubo et al. | |
| H3K4 and H3K27 methylation two of the most important histone methylation marks in normal cell. | Regulate gene expression | (Chi et al. | Human myeloid and lymphoid leukemias | H3K4 methylation is increased by the MLL (mixed lineage leukemia) gene rearrangement and increase level of H3K4-specific HMT expression. | (Chi et al. | |
| Prostate, breast, colon, skin and lung cancer | EZH2, an H3K27-specific methyltransferase, overexpression in various solid tumors may increase the H3K27 methylation and disrupt the normal activity in cancer cell. | (Chi et al. | ||||
| LSD1 demethylates H3K4me2/1. | Repress the invasiveness and metastasis of breast cancer cells. | (Wang et al. | Breast carcinoma | LSD1 downregulates. | (Wang et al. | |
| Ubiquitination | In normal cell, polycomb group protein Bmi1 and histone H2A monoubiquitination suppress oncogene expression. | (Barco et al. | Synovial sarcoma | SYT-SSX2 recruitment promotes the displacement and/or degradation of Bmi1 protein and histone H2A hypoubiquitination which is responsible for the reactivation of polycomb-repressed genes. | (Barco et al. | |
| miRNA | let-7 has very important role in the maintenance of stemness of stem cell and cancer stem cell. In ESCs, accumulation of let-7 related to the reduction of the level of LIN28, LIN28B and MYC (promote induction of pluripotency). | MYC, RAS and HMGA2 oncogene expression and cell-cycle progression controlled by let -7. | (Viswanathan et al. | Breast cancer cell line, non-small-cell lung carcinoma | In cancer, stem-cell let-7 expression is repressed. | (Büssing et al. |
| miR-145 negatively regulate the pluripotency of hESCs. miR-145 directly targeted the 3′ untranslated region of NANOG (in murine ESCs), OCT4, SOX2, KLF4 and inhibit the expression of these protein. | Necessary for downregulation of pluripotency genes during differentiation. | (Xu et al. | Breast cancer, colorectal cancer, cervical cancer and lung adenocarcinoma | miR-145 downregulate | (Cho et al. | |
See also Supplementary Table-II for Class A-I, Class A-II, Class B-I, and Class B-II genes
Fig. 1Embryo development and epigenetic reprogramming cycle. Epigenetic modifications take place in two phases during the embryo development. Fertilization signals the reprogramming during preimplantation development. I-A In preimplantation development just after fertilization, DNA demethylation takes place in male pronucleus but female pronucleus remains unchanged. I-B Thereafter, both genomes are passively demethylated, except at imprinted genes and some transposons, for several rounds of cell division. This demethylation occurs due to disruption of maintenance methylation mechanism. I-C The genome is de novo methylated around the blastocyst stage, which responsible for differentiation of the first two lineages of the blastocyst stage, the inner cell mass (ICM) and the trophectoderm. All embryonic lineages differentiate from the ICM. II-A PGCs arise from somatic tissue and develop into mature gametes during gametogenesis stage. Their genome undergoes DNA demethylation in the embryo between day 11.5 and 12.5, including all imprinted genes. II-B Following demethylation, the genomes of the gametes are de novo methylated and acquire imprints; this process continues up to 18.5 in males and in maturing oocytes before ovulation in females
Fig. 2During early embryogenesis, master transcriptional regulatory genes and signaling pathways play essential roles in cell line differentiation. Esrrb, Tbx3 and Tcl1, as well as Nanog, Oct4 and Sox2, are required for self-renewal property of ES cells. Oct4 is required to prevent trophectodermal differentiation; Nanog and Sox2 appear to be global regulators that repress multiple differentiation programs, whereas Esrrb, Tbx3 and Tcl1 are essential to block the differentiation into epiblast-derived lineages. These regulators couple with transcriptional network and control the expression ofdifferent genes through distinct molecular pathways. Downregulation of Nanog, SOX2, ESRRB, Tbx3 or TCL1 leads to the immediate induction of Otx2 (orthodenticle homolog 2), Pitx2 (paired-like homeodomain transcription factor-2), Sox18 (SRY (Sex determining region Y)-box 18), and probably additional genes, which help in the differentiation of cell lineages in epiblast. Tead4 expresses when Oct4, Nanog and Sox2 are repressed. Tead4 expression is responsible for Cdx2 gene expression that is nesessary for placenta development. Nanog directly repress GATA6, which results in repression of GATA4, thereby inhibiting primitive endoderm differentiation