| Literature DB >> 28678605 |
Akpéli V Nordor1,2,3,4,5,6, Djamel Nehar-Belaid7,8, Sophie Richon9, David Klatzmann7,8,10, Dominique Bellet2,3,4,5,11, Virginie Dangles-Marie1,12, Thierry Fournier13,14,15, Martin J Aryee6,16.
Abstract
The placenta relies on phenotypes that are characteristic of cancer to successfully implant the embryo in the uterus during early pregnancy. Notably, it has to invade its host tissues, promote angiogenesis-while surviving hypoxia-, and escape the immune system. Similarities in DNA methylation patterns between the placenta and cancers suggest that common epigenetic mechanisms may be involved in regulating these behaviors. We show here that megabase-scale patterns of hypomethylation distinguish first from third trimester chorionic villi in the placenta, and that these patterns mirror those that distinguish many tumors from corresponding normal tissues. We confirmed these findings in villous cytotrophoblasts isolated from the placenta and identified a time window at the end of the first trimester, when these cells come into contact with maternal blood, as the likely time period for the methylome alterations. Furthermore, the large genomic regions affected by these patterns of hypomethylation encompass genes involved in pathways related to epithelial-mesenchymal transition, immune response, and inflammation. Analyses of expression profiles corresponding to genes in these hypomethylated regions in colon adenocarcinoma tumors point to networks of differentially expressed genes previously implicated in carcinogenesis and placentogenesis, where nuclear factor kappa B is a key hub. Taken together, our results suggest the existence of epigenetic switches involving large-scale changes of methylation in the placenta during pregnancy and in tumors during neoplastic transformation. The characterization of such epigenetic switches might lead to the identification of biomarkers and drug targets in oncology as well as in obstetrics and gynecology.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; DNA methylation; epigenetics; epigenomics; hypomethylation; placenta; pregnancy
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28678605 PMCID: PMC5739102 DOI: 10.1080/15592294.2017.1342912
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epigenetics ISSN: 1559-2294 Impact factor: 4.528
Figure 1.Comparison of DNA methylation in placenta and cancer. (A) Design of the study. (B) Top: methylation level plotted against the distance to the nearest CpG island. In pink, the solid line denotes first trimester and the dashed line denotes third trimester chorionic villi samples. In purple, the solid line denotes colon adenocarcinoma tumor samples and the dashed line denotes corresponding normal tissue samples. Bottom: methylation difference in first vs. third trimester chorionic villi samples (pink) and tumor vs. normal tissue samples (purple). (C) Fraction of hypermethylation (hypermethylation alterations / total alterations) in island CpGs (x-axis) vs. fraction of hypomethylation (hypomethylation alterations / total alterations) in open sea CpGs (y-axis) in placenta (pink) and cancer samples (purple). CpGs were classified as altered if they displayed an absolute methylation difference >0.05 with a FDR q-value < 0.05. Horizontal and vertical dashed lines represent average fractions in cancer. Abbreviations as in Table 1.
Large blocks of differential methylation in placenta and cancer tissues.
| Number of Blocks (N) | Genomic Size (Mb) | Prop. Hypo. Blocks (%) | Med. Diff. Methylation (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chorionic villi (CHVL) | 1240 | 346 | 93 | −10 |
| Bladder urothelial carcinoma (BLCA) | 1865 | 887 | 99 | −11 |
| Breast invasive carcinoma (BRCA) | 2195 | 774 | 52 | −5 |
| Colon adenocarcinoma (COAD) | 1978 | 843 | 81 | −8 |
| Esophageal carcinoma (ESCA) | 965 | 306 | 94 | −9 |
| Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSC) | 2099 | 916 | 73 | −7 |
| Liver hepatocellular carcinoma (LIHC) | 1856 | 1078 | 99 | −12 |
| Lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) | 1620 | 593 | 72 | −6 |
| Lung squamous cell carcinoma (LUSC) | 2063 | 966 | 84 | −8 |
| Pancreatic adenocarcinoma (PAAD) | 1058 | 212 | 81 | −6 |
| Prostate adenocarcinoma (PRAD) | 2105 | 568 | 26 | 3 |
| Rectum adenocarcinoma (READ) | 1183 | 422 | 100 | −15 |
| Thyroid carcinoma (THCA) | 1752 | 422 | 20 | −3 |
| Uterine corpus endometrioid carcinoma (UCEC) | 2041 | 686 | 76 | −8 |
Prop. Hypo. Blocks (%): proportion of hypomethylated blocks in percent. Med. Diff. Methylation (%): median of the average difference between first and third trimester/malignant and normal.
Figure 2.Hypomethylated blocks in placenta and cancer. (A) The light green zone shows an illustrative placenta hypomethylated block representing a difference in average methylation between first trimester (solid line) and third trimester (dashed line) chorionic villi samples. Gene loci are marked in yellow. (B) The light green zone shows an illustrative cancer hypomethylated block representing a difference in average methylation between colon adenocarcinoma tumor (solid line) and corresponding normal tissue (dashed line) samples. Gene loci are marked in yellow. (C) Distributions of the lengths of placenta hypomethylated blocks in pink and cancer hypomethylated blocks (colon adenocarcinoma) in purple. (D) Distributions of the number of genes per placenta hypomethylated blocks in pink, and cancer hypomethylated blocks in purple (colon adenocarcinoma). Abbreviations as in Table 1.
Figure 3.Hypomethylated blocks in isolated villous cytotrophoblasts. (A) The light green zone shows an illustrative cytotrophoblast hypomethylated block representing a difference in average methylation between early first trimester (solid line) and late first trimester (dashed line) villous cytotrophoblast samples. Gene loci are marked in yellow. (B) Null distribution of overlap fraction between cytotrophoblast hypomethylated blocks and randomly sampled regions equal in size to placenta hypomethylated blocks (chorionic villi). The dashed green line represents the observed overlap fraction (85%, P-value <0.001). Abbreviations as in Table 1.
Figure 4.Gene set enrichment for genes encompassed in placenta and cancer hypomethylated blocks. (A) Bubble chart representing the enrichment of MsigDB hallmark gene sets in placenta and cancer hypomethylated blocks (colon adenocarcinoma). “Cancer/Placenta” (“Cancer Unique”) represents genes in cancer hypomethylated blocks that co-localize (do not co-localize) with a placenta hypomethylated block. Only the significant enrichments (P-value <0.05) are presented. Networks of genes belonging to cancer/placenta blocks and relating to the (B) “TNF-α signaling via NF-kappa B” gene set and the (C) “UV Response - Down” gene set were identified using IPA software. Abbreviations as in Table 1.