| Literature DB >> 25612624 |
Alberto J Arribas1, Andrea Rinaldi1, Afua A Mensah1, Ivo Kwee2, Luciano Cascione3, Eloy F Robles4, Jose A Martinez-Climent4, David Oscier5, Luca Arcaini6, Luca Baldini7, Roberto Marasca8, Catherine Thieblemont9, Josette Briere9, Francesco Forconi10, Alberto Zamò11, Massimiliano Bonifacio11, Manuela Mollejo12, Fabio Facchetti13, Stephan Dirnhofer14, Maurilio Ponzoni15, Govind Bhagat16, Miguel A Piris17, Gianluca Gaidano18, Emanuele Zucca19, Davide Rossi18, Francesco Bertoni3.
Abstract
Splenic marginal zone lymphoma is a rare lymphoma. Loss of 7q31 and somatic mutations affecting the NOTCH2 and KLF2 genes are the commonest genomic aberrations. Epigenetic changes can be pharmacologically reverted; therefore, identification of groups of patients with specific epigenomic alterations might have therapeutic relevance. Here we integrated genome-wide DNA-promoter methylation profiling with gene expression profiling, and clinical and biological variables. An unsupervised clustering analysis of a test series of 98 samples identified 2 clusters with different degrees of promoter methylation. The cluster comprising samples with higher-promoter methylation (High-M) had a poorer overall survival compared with the lower (Low-M) cluster. The prognostic relevance of the High-M phenotype was confirmed in an independent validation set of 36 patients. In the whole series, the High-M phenotype was associated with IGHV1-02 usage, mutations of NOTCH2 gene, 7q31-32 loss, and histologic transformation. In the High-M set, a number of tumor-suppressor genes were methylated and repressed. PRC2 subunit genes and several prosurvival lymphoma genes were unmethylated and overexpressed. A model based on the methylation of 3 genes (CACNB2, HTRA1, KLF4) identified a poorer-outcome patient subset. Exposure of splenic marginal zone lymphoma cell lines to a demethylating agent caused partial reversion of the High-M phenotype and inhibition of proliferation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25612624 PMCID: PMC4416938 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2014-08-596247
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113