| Literature DB >> 23587053 |
Thomas Mikeska1, Kathryn Alsop, Gillian Mitchell, David Dl Bowtell, Alexander Dobrovic.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: High-grade serous ovarian cancers are a distinct histological subtype of ovarian cancer often characterised by a dysfunctional BRCA/Fanconi anaemia (BRCA/FA) pathway, which is critical to the homologous recombination DNA repair machinery. An impaired BRCA/FA pathway sensitises tumours to the treatment with DNA cross-linking agents and to PARP inhibitors. The vast majority of inactivating mutations in the BRCA/FA pathway are in the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes and occur predominantly in high-grade serous cancer. Another member of the BRCA/FA pathway, PALB2 (FANCN), was reported to have been inactivated by DNA methylation in some sporadic ovarian cancers. We therefore sought to investigate the role of PALB2 methylation in high-grade serous ovarian cancers. FINDING: PALB2 methylation was investigated in 92 high-grade serous ovarian cancer samples using methylation-sensitive high-resolution melting analysis. DNA methylation of PALB2 was not detected in any of the ovarian cancer samples investigated.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23587053 PMCID: PMC3636006 DOI: 10.1186/1757-2215-6-26
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ovarian Res ISSN: 1757-2215 Impact factor: 4.234
Figure 1Genomic positions of the PCR amplicons used in the Potapova study and in this study respectively, relative to exon 1 of in the UCSC Genome Browser (GRCh37/hg19). The region investigated in this study partially overlaps with the region analysed in the Potapova study [9].
Figure 2Melting profiles of selected high-grade serous ovarian cancer samples obtained from MS-HRM experiments for methylation analysis. The melting profiles were partly smoothened by applying a light digital filter available in the Rotor-Gene 6000 analysis software. Melting profiles for fully methylated (100%), 50%, 10% and unmethylated (0%) standards as well as the tumour samples are shown as red, turquoise, black, green and blue curves. Tm plots (negative first derivative of the melting curves) are shown in the left panel and the corresponding difference plots are shown in the right panel, respectively. In difference plots, the melting profiles of the fully methylated standard are chosen as a baseline and the relative differences in melting profiles of all other samples are plotted relative to this baseline. The high-grade serous ovarian cancer DNAs (blue curves) are unmethylated for PALB2 as can be seen by their superimposition on the unmethylated standard (green curves).