| Literature DB >> 27732966 |
Helen Ross-Adams1, Stephen Ball2, Kate Lawrenson3, Silvia Halim1, Roslin Russell1, Claire Wells4, Siri H Strand5, Torben F Ørntoft5, Melissa Larson6, Sebastian Armasu6, Charles E Massie1, Mohammad Asim1, Martin M Mortensen7, Michael Borre7, Kathryn Woodfine1, Anne Y Warren8, Alastair D Lamb1,9, Jonathan Kay1,10, Hayley Whitaker1,10, Antonio Ramos-Montoya1, Adele Murrell11, Karina D Sørensen5, Brooke L Fridley12, Ellen L Goode6, Simon A Gayther3, John Masters2, David E Neal1,9, Ian G Mills1,13,14,15.
Abstract
Two independent regions within HNF1B are consistently identified in prostate and ovarian cancer genome-wide association studies (GWAS); their functional roles are unclear. We link prostate cancer (PC) risk SNPs rs11649743 and rs3760511 with elevated HNF1B gene expression and allele-specific epigenetic silencing, and outline a mechanism by which common risk variants could effect functional changes that increase disease risk: functional assays suggest that HNF1B is a pro-differentiation factor that suppresses epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) in unmethylated, healthy tissues. This tumor-suppressor activity is lost when HNF1B is silenced by promoter methylation in the progression to PC. Epigenetic inactivation of HNF1B in ovarian cancer also associates with known risk SNPs, with a similar impact on EMT. This represents one of the first comprehensive studies into the pleiotropic role of a GWAS-associated transcription factor across distinct cancer types, and is the first to describe a conserved role for a multi-cancer genetic risk factor.Entities:
Keywords: HNF1B; cancer; eQTL; ovarian; prostate
Mesh:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27732966 PMCID: PMC5342698 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.12543
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Overall LD within HNF1B highlighting eight regions (black triangles), with rs11649743 in region 7 and rs4430796, rs7501939 and rs3760511 in region 8
Ovarian cancer risk SNP rs757210 lies immediately adjacent to region 8. D′ values were derived from 1000 genomes project CEU data (http://www.1000genomes.org/), and linkage plots generated in Haploview using 95 % confidence intervals (Gabriel 2002).
Pair-wise estimates of LD between each of the five markers studied (r2; CEU population), confirming three distinct groupings of the SNPs studied
| rs11649743 | rs757210 | rs4430796 | rs7501939 | rs3760511 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 0.005 | 0.014 | 0.025 | 0.116 | |
| 1 | 0.543 | 0.739 | 0.163 | ||
| 1 | 0.764 | 0.337 | |||
| 1 | 0.257 | ||||
| 1 |
Figure 2Association between genotype and increased gene expression at rs11649743 with HNF1B levels in prostate tumor tissue, but not benign (Kruskal-Wallis p = 0.038) in British samples (A), between rs3760511-G and HNF1B levels in laser-capture micro-dissected Danish prostate tumor samples (Kruskal-Wallis p = 0.018) (B)
Figure 3Methylation at the HNF1B promoter is significantly higher in prostate tumor tissues compared to matched benign in British (t-test p = 0.0076) (A) and Danish samples (B) (ranksum t-test; blue spots indicate statistical significance at the corresponding CpG probe)
The significance threshold p < 0.05 (log10(p) > 1.301) is indicated by the green line. Ovarian cancer risk SNP rs757210 is also associated with HNF1B promoter methylation (pink spots) in 231 HGS cases (see also Supplementary Table 7). Histone modifications typical of active promoters – H3K4Me1, H3K4Me3 and H3K27Ac – overlap with the transcription start site, both small and large CpG islands and risk SNP rs3760511 (UCSC Genome browser, hg19). Figure 3Aiii. Increased methylation at HNF1B promoter correlates strongly with reduced levels of HNF1B expression prostate tissue (TCGA data). Pink spots = tumor; blue spots = matched normal tissue. Figure 3-Bi. Prostate cancer risk allele rs11649743-G is associated with reduced levels of HNF1B promoter methylation in tumor tissue, but not benign tissue in British samples (p = 0.0296), while risk allele rs3760511-G is associated with reduced levels of HNF1B methylation (p = 0.0283) in 21 pairs of Danish prostate cancer samples (3B-ii).
Figure 4The differential effects of HNF1B in cancer and normal prostate cellular contexts
Over-expression of HNF1B was associated with a reduction in rate of proliferation in prostate cancer lines PC3 and DU145 compared to empty vector (4A-i), but had no effect in normal PNT2a cells (4A-ii). No effect on viability on any cell line was observed (4A-iii, iv). HNF1B over-expression also correlated with a reduction in cell migration in PC3 and DU145 cells (p < 0.0001)(4B-i), but had no effect on cell migration in normal PNT2a prostate cells (p = 0.7771; 4B-ii). The invasiveness of PC3 and DU145 cancer cells was also significantly reduced with over-expression of HNF1B (p < 0.0001 and p < 0.0003, respectively; Figure 4C-i). No difference was seen in normal PNT2a cells (p = 0.5358; Figure 4Cii). Clonogenic potential was significantly reduced in cancer models PC3 and DU145 over-expressing HNF1B (p = 0.01 and p < 0.0001 respectively) (Figure 4D-i), but showed no change in the PNT2a model (p = 0.2784, Figure 4D-ii).
Figure 5Over-expression of HNF1B in ovarian IOSE4 cells is associated with increased proliferation (5A), migration (5B) and invasion (5C) compared to IOSE4 cells expressing control GFP