Literature DB >> 29399289

Epigenetic basis of hepatocellular carcinoma: A network-based integrative meta-analysis.

Venkat Bhat1, Sujitha Srinathan2, Elisa Pasini2, Marc Angeli2, Emily Chen2, Cristina Baciu2, Mamatha Bhat2.   

Abstract

AIM: To identify the key epigenetically modulated genes and pathways in HCC by performing an integrative meta-analysis of all major, well-annotated and publicly available methylation datasets using tools of network analysis.
METHODS: PubMed and Gene Expression Omnibus were searched for genome-wide DNA methylation datasets. Patient clinical and demographic characteristics were obtained. DNA methylation data were integrated using the Ingenuity Pathway Analysis, a software package for visualizing and analyzing biological networks. Pathway enrichment analysis was performed using IPA, which also provides literature-driven and computationally-predicted annotations for significant association of genes to curated molecular pathways.
RESULTS: From an initial 928 potential abstracts, we identified and analyzed 11 eligible high-throughput methylation datasets representing 354 patients. A significant proportion of studies did not provide concomitant clinical data. In the promoter region, HIST1H2AJ and SPDYA were the most commonly methylated, whereas HRNBP3 gene was the most commonly hypomethylated. ESR1 and ERK were central genes in the principal networks. The pathways most associated with the frequently methylated genes were G-protein coupled receptor and cAMP-mediated signalling.
CONCLUSION: Using an integrative network-based analysis approach of genome-wide DNA methylation data of both the promoter and body of genes, we identified G-protein coupled receptor signalling as the most highly associated with HCC. This encompasses a diverse range of cancer pathways, such as the PI3K/Akt/mTOR and Ras/Raf/MAPK pathways, and is therefore supportive of previous literature on gene expression in HCC. However, there are novel targetable genes such as HIST1H2AJ that are epigenetically modified, suggesting their potential as biomarkers and for therapeutic targeting of the HCC epigenome.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Hepatocellular carcinoma; Methylation; Network analysis

Year:  2018        PMID: 29399289      PMCID: PMC5787679          DOI: 10.4254/wjh.v10.i1.155

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  World J Hepatol


Core tip: Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a high-fatality cancer with limited screening biomarkers and therapeutic options. It arises in the context of chronic liver disease, having accumulated epigenetic changes over time. The goal of this study was to perform an integrative network-based meta-analysis of all genome-wide DNA methylation data in HCC. Using bioinformatics tools, we identified the most important aberrantly methylated genes and associated pathways. G-protein receptor signaling was the most significantly associated with HCC based on differential methylation of involved genes, which is consistent with the implication of the Ras/Raf/MAPK and mTOR pathways. The identification of novel epigenetically modified genes such as HIST1H2AJ within known pathways suggests targeting of the epigenome as a potential therapeutic avenue for HCC.

INTRODUCTION

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) arises in the context of chronic liver disease, where there is ongoing injury over decades. HCC incidence in North America has been increasing in recent years, in the setting of a higher prevalence of cirrhosis secondary to hepatitis C and fatty liver disease[1]. It is the fifth most common cancer worldwide, and five-year survival is the second worst worldwide among all cancers at 8.9%. HCC is often diagnosed at later stages, and there is an inability to tolerate chemotherapy in patients with cirrhosis[1]. Curative treatment with resection, radiofrequency ablation or transplantation is only possible in early stage disease[2]. When diagnosed at a later stage, the first-line chemotherapeutic agent is sorafenib, which extends survival only by 3 mo[2]. Several other trials of chemotherapeutic regimens have been developed based on studies of genomic and transcriptomic data, with no further improvement in overall survival[3]. There is therefore a dire need to better understand HCC pathogenesis, elucidate screening biomarkers in patients at risk, and develop more optimal therapeutic agents. Epigenetic changes are of significant interest to this malignancy, given that it results from mutations accumulating over time with exposure to various insults such as viral hepatitis, alcohol or fatty liver. Epigenetic modifications are heritable states of gene expression without altering DNA sequences[4]. They encompass processes such as DNA methylation, histone modifications, non-coding RNAs and nucleosome positioning. These changes are passed along faithfully to daughter cells during cell division[4]. Among these, DNA methylation has been the most studied, regulating gene expression through a stable silencing mechanism[5]. Covalent modification by DNA methyltransferases of cytosine residues with methyl groups in CpG dinucleotides occurs preferentially at the 5’ end in promoter regions. Transcriptional gene silencing results from this through two mechanisms: steric hindrance of transcription factors being able to access their cognate binding sites on gene promoters[5], and direct binding of methyl CpG binding domain containing proteins to the methylated DNA causing transcriptional repression[6]. The recent advent of genome-wide methylation analysis has enabled an appreciation of methylation status in genes of interest to cancer: Hypermethylation of tumor suppressor genes, hypomethylation of oncogenes, and methylation of repetitive elements[7]. The extensive reprogramming of the epigenome in cancer has led to a growing interest in epigenetic therapy. Specifically in HCC, aberrant DNA methylation of tumor suppressor gene promoters has been documented[8]. These epigenetic changes have been closely correlated with disease stage and clinical outcome[9]. There has been significant variability in the reported frequency of hypermethylated loci in HCC[10-12]. CDKN2A is methylated in 30%-70% of HCCs[10,12,13], RASSF1A in up to 85%[11,12], GSTP1 in 50-90%[14] and MGMT in 40%[15]. DNA methylation loci have also been reported as significantly enriched in the signaling networks of cellular development, gene expression, cell death, and cancer[16]. Our study represents the first comprehensive network-based attempt to integrate all relevant, publicly available, high-throughput genome-wide DNA methylation data to better understand the epigenetic landscape in HCC. Network and pathway analysis tools can enable identification of the most commonly methylated genes across studies and associated pathways, and propose novel treatment options using network-based analysis[17,18]. The goal of this study was to identify key epigenetically modulated genes and pathways in HCC by integrating all major, well-annotated and publicly available methylation datasets datasets using tools of network analysis.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Data collection, analysis and database compiling

Genome-wide methylation profiles related to HCC samples were downloaded from published datasets (PubMed, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/PubMed) using the following MeSH terms: “{[“methylation”(MeSH Terms) or “methylation” (all fields)] and [“carcinoma, hepatocellular” (MeSH terms) or [“carcinoma” (all fields) and “hepatocellular” (all fields)] or “hepatocellular carcinoma” (All Fields) or ["hepatocellular" (all fields) and "carcinoma" (all fields)]} and ["humans" (MeSH Terms) and English (lang)]. All entries on PubMed since 2002, which represents the advent of high-throughput profiling, were considered for inclusion. A second search was performed using Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO), a public functional genomics data repository containing genome-wide methylation profile array data (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo). This search was performed using the following MeSH terms {[“methylation” (MeSH Terms) or methylation (all fields)] and [“carcinoma, hepatocellular” (MeSH terms) or hepatocellular carcinoma (all fields) and “Homo sapiens” (porgn) and “Homo sapiens” (porgn) and “Homo sapiens” (porgn)] and “Homo sapiens” (porgn)}, covering all HCC high-throughput methylation profiling datasets comparing HCC to adjacent non-tumoral tissue. The study workflow is illustrated in Figure 1A. Results were retrieved from both databases: GEO and PubMed. The exclusion criteria listed in Figure 1A were applied to identify papers reporting quantitative results of methylation profile performed on HCC patients and the relative adjacent tissue as control.
Figure 1

Flow chart. A: Workflow of Data collection, analysis and database compiling; B: Bioinformatics flow for selecting differentially methylated CpG sites from HCC meta-analysis; C: Bioinformatics flow for selecting differentially methylated genes from HCC meta-analysis. HCC: Hepatocellular carcinoma.

Flow chart. A: Workflow of Data collection, analysis and database compiling; B: Bioinformatics flow for selecting differentially methylated CpG sites from HCC meta-analysis; C: Bioinformatics flow for selecting differentially methylated genes from HCC meta-analysis. HCC: Hepatocellular carcinoma. Available patient data, including etiology of liver disease (HCV, HBV, alcohol, fatty liver disease) on the basis of which the HCC tumors developed, presence of cirrhosis, the Model for End-stage Liver Disease score (MELD score, an assessment of the severity of liver dysfunction), tumor histology, stage of cancer, alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) level, overall and recurrence-free survival following treatment were also documented. We identified 928 abstracts retrieved by the search on PubMed and 233 results were obtained from GEO. The flow chart outlining the selection process is detailed in Figure 1A. Details regarding the 11 included studies[8,19-30], together with the information on number of samples per group, per study are provided in Table 1.
Table 1

Datasets used for the meta-analysis

NoGEO AccessionPubMed IDHCC samplesAdjacent tissue samples
1215001881312
22430666214545
32537629212222
4GSE5926022594512988
5GSE297202217471161212
6GSE180812201658822020
7GSE37988222349436262
8GSE4497024012984208
9GSE54503232080766666
10GSE57956250935045959
11GSE607532252948082727

Only genes are reported, without information on CpG sites;

Differential methylation data analysis performed in-house.

Datasets used for the meta-analysis Only genes are reported, without information on CpG sites; Differential methylation data analysis performed in-house.

Demographic and clinical characteristics

Demographic and clinical patient information pertaining to each dataset are presented in Tables 2 and 3.
Table 2

Availability of clinicopathological information on the 11 datasets used for the integrative analysis of genome-wide DNA methylation

Clinical-pathological informationn = 11%
Cirrhosis status in HCC samples655
Child-Pugh/MELD Score327
HCC Etiology1091
Alphafetoprotein level545
Tumor grade545
Tumor stage545
Survival data327
Table 3

Clinicopathological information of the individual datasets and methodology used for methylation analysis

DatasetYearPMIDGEO datasetHCC (n)Controls (n)Liver cirrhosis in HCC samplesEtiology of liver disease (n)Method
12011215001881312Y (12)HBV (3), HCV (4), alcoholic (6)Human methylation 27 DNA analysis bead-chip
22014243066624545Y (120), N (34)HBV (149), HCV (1), nonviral (4)Illumina GoldenGate Methylation Beadarray Cancer Panel I
32014253762922222N/AHBV (1), HCV (9), alcohol (4), other (8)Infinium Humanmethylation 27 Beadchip
4201525945129GSE5926088N/AHBV-HCV-(8)Nimblegen Human DNA Methylation 3 x 720K CpG Island PI
5201121747116GSE297201212N/AN/AAgilent-017075 human hg 18 promoter 800-200
6201020165882GSE180812020Y (20)HCV (20)Illumina Golden Gate Methylation Beadarray Cancer Panel I
7201222234943GSE379886262N/AHBV-HCV-(7), HBV + HCV-(36), HBV-HCV+(6), HBV + HCV+(13)Illumina Human Methylation27 Beadchip
8201324012984GSE44970208N/AHCV (8)Human Methylation27 Beadchip
9201323208076GSE545036666Y (48), N (17), missing (1)HBV-HCV-(19), HCV (19), HBV (13), HBV + HCV (4), missing (11)Infinium Human Methylation 450K Beadchip
10201425093504GSE579565959Y (37), N (21)HBV+(36), HBV-(23)Intinium Ilumanmethylation27 Beadchip
11201425294808GSE607532727Y (26), N (1)HBV (1), HCV (7), alcohol (9), other (10)Iinfinium -450K Human Methy lation Beadchip
Availability of clinicopathological information on the 11 datasets used for the integrative analysis of genome-wide DNA methylation Clinicopathological information of the individual datasets and methodology used for methylation analysis Only 6 out of 11 papers (55%) included details regarding presence/absence of cirrhosis, and 10 out 11 papers (91%) provided details regarding the etiology of liver disease. MELD or Child-Pugh score were provided in 27% of papers. Less than half of the selected publications, 5 out of 11 (45%), included details regarding the stage of cancer, although all studies were performed using hepatectomy patient samples. The same trend is identified for information regarding the histologic grade of the tumor (well-, moderately-, or poorly-differentiated tumors). Only 5 out of 11 papers (45%) had alpha-fetoprotein levels available. Overall survival and HCC recurrence statistics as follow-up data were available in 3/11 studies (27%).

Genomic region selection

For the final network-based integrative analysis, we selected 11 datasets (Table 1). Out of these, raw data from eight studies were available on the GEO website (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/). Except for the GSE60753[25] dataset, for which we have performed our own analysis with R[31] (due to comparison between sample groups required being different from the main paper), we selected the CpG sites or genes reported to be hyper-or hypo- methylated in the corresponding publications. In 6/11 datasets, CpGs and the mapped genes were selected, whereas in the remaining 5/11 datasets, only the genes without CpG sites were found. Therefore, we separated our analysis into two parts: (1) Taking into account approximately 13500 CpG sites provided or obtained with R analysis (Figure 1B); and (2) considering only the 4122 differentially methylated genes without information on the corresponding CpG sites (Figure 1C). In both cases, the genomic region is considered differentially methylated between HCC tissue and the adjacent non-tumoral sample, if the FDR[32] corrected P-value < 0.01. Furthermore, we filtered out everything that did not satisfy the criteria: ∆β ≥ 0.20 or ∆β ≤ -0.20, where ∆β = βHCC - βadjacent was the difference in methylation between above specified groups. When the CpG sites were considered, the Illumina HumanMethylation450K and 27K platforms were used for mapping to the genes. When multiple sites or genes were found having the same sense of differential methylation, the mean value of ∆β was calculated. The CpGs in the 5’UTR, 1st Exon, TSS200, TSS1500 or in CpG islands were considered in the promoter and all other CpGs were considered to be in the body of the gene.

Pathway and network analysis

Two final lists of differentially methylated genes corresponding to CpGs in the promoter (n = 765, Supplementary Table 1) or to the body of the gene (n = 411, Supplementary Table 2) and their corresponding mean (∆β) were uploaded into IPA (Ingenuity Systems®, www.ingenuity.com). Based on the manually-curated Ingenuity Knowledge Base derived from experiments and findings published in top peer-reviewed journals, IPA identifies a series of canonical pathways, diseases and functions or networks associated with the molecules in the input list. For each of these, a P-value is calculated with the right-tailed Fisher’s exact test[33], which takes into account the number of focus molecules (input genes) in the network and the total number of molecules in the IPA database that could be included in the corresponding networks.

RESULTS

Based on datasets with known CpG sites, the most frequently hypermethylated genes in the promoter region included HIST1H2AJ, which is a histone protein and SPDYA, a cell cycle regulator known to trigger transition from G1 to S phase. The HRNBP3 gene, an RNA-binding protein, was the most commonly hypomethylated in the promoter region. Further details are provided in Supplementary Tables 1 and 2.

Using the differentially methylated CpG sites in the promoter

Canonical pathways: The most significantly associated pathways with our list of differentially methylated genes are given in Table 4. G-protein coupled receptor signaling, Transcriptional Regulatory Network in Embryonic Cells, cAMP-mediated signaling were the top hits.
Table 4

Top canonical pathways identified by IPA for the genes corresponding to CpG sites in promoter

Ingenuity canonical pathways-log (P-value)Molecules
G-protein coupled receptor signaling3.84E+00DRD5, GNA11, VIPR2, ADCY5, ADRB1, CNR1, PIK3R5, NPY1R, FPR1, FFAR3, NFKBID, MC2R, PDPK1, GRM4, MC3R, CXCR2, PRKAR1B, DRD4, PDE6B, HCAR2, DUSP4, PTGDR
Transcriptional regulatory network in embryonic stem cells3.42E+00MYF5, SIX3, PAX6, GBX2, CDYL, FOXD3, ONECUT1, FOXC1
cAMP-mediated signaling3.22E+00DRD5, VIPR2, ADCY5, ADRB1, CNR1, NPY1R, FPR1, FFAR3, MC2R, GRM4, MC3R, CXCR2, PRKAR1B, DRD4, PDE6B, HCAR2, DUSP4, PTGDR
Top canonical pathways identified by IPA for the genes corresponding to CpG sites in promoter Diseases and functions: Not surprisingly Cancer, Organismal Injury and Abnormalities were identified as some of the top diseases and functions. Among different types of cancer, abdominal cancer (P = 1.7E-210), digestive system cancer (P = 7.88E-14), abdominal carcinoma and digestive organ tumor (P = 8.58E-13–1.76E-12) were listed. Cellular development (P-value=3.22E-03–2.66E-08), growth and proliferation (P = 3.22E-03–6.99E-06) were the most important molecular and cellular functions associated with HCC methylated data. Networks: Among the most statistically and biologically significant networks associated with the genes differentially methylated in the promoter region, three of them captured our attention: Organismal Development, Organismal Injury and Abnormalities, Cellular Development (Figure 2A), Lipid Metabolism, Small Molecule Biochemistry, Cell Death and Survival (Figure 2B) and Cell-to-Cell Signaling and Interaction, Drug Metabolism, Small Molecule Biochemistry (Figure 2C). We noted that networks 1 and 3 were mainly formed by the hyper-methylated genes, whereas network 2 is constituted by both hyper- and hypo-methylated genes approximately equally.
Figure 2

Networks associated with differentially methylated CpG sites in the promoter regions of genes. A: Organismal development, organismal injury and abnormalities, cellular development; B: Lipid metabolism, small molecule biochemistry, cell death and survival; C: Cell-to-cell signaling and interaction, drug metabolism, small molecule biochemistry.

Networks associated with differentially methylated CpG sites in the promoter regions of genes. A: Organismal development, organismal injury and abnormalities, cellular development; B: Lipid metabolism, small molecule biochemistry, cell death and survival; C: Cell-to-cell signaling and interaction, drug metabolism, small molecule biochemistry.

Using the differentially methylated CpG sites in the body of the gene

Canonical pathways: G-protein coupled receptor signaling and cAMP-mediated signaling were among the top 20 hits (Table 5), which was similar to the pathways generated by the genes with methylated CpG sites in the promoter region.
Table 5

Canonical pathways identified by IPA for the genes with methylation differences in the body of the gene in hepatocellular carcinoma

Ingenuity canonical pathways-log (P-value)Molecules
Aryl hydrocarbon receptor signaling2.48E+00GSTM1, CCND2, TFF1, ALDH1L2, GSTM2, TP73, GSTP1, ALDH3A1
G-protein coupled receptor signaling2.03E+00CAMK2B, RGS7, GABBR1, PDE4D, ADCY2, PDE1C, ADRA1D, NPR3, PDE10A, GRM6, PRKCG
cAMP-mediated signaling1.73E+00CAMK2B, RGS7, GABBR1, PDE4D, ADCY2, PDE1C, NPR3, PDE10A, GRM6
Canonical pathways identified by IPA for the genes with methylation differences in the body of the gene in hepatocellular carcinoma Diseases and functions: Our study shows that DNA methylation in HCC patients leads to the same diseases and functions, regardless of the CpG site position (promoter or body), with cancer and, in particular, abdominal/digestive system cancer among the top listed by IPA. Networks: From the top detected networks, the Cell-To-Cell Signaling and Interaction, Cellular Assembly and Organization, Cellular Function and Maintenance (Figure 3A) and Drug Metabolism, Glutathione Depletion in Liver, Small Molecule Biochemistry (Figure 3B) are closely related to HCC.
Figure 3

Networks associated with differentially methylated CpG sites in body of the gene. A: Cellular assembly and organization, cellular function and maintenance; B: Drug metabolism, glutathione depletion in liver, small molecule biochemistry.

Networks associated with differentially methylated CpG sites in body of the gene. A: Cellular assembly and organization, cellular function and maintenance; B: Drug metabolism, glutathione depletion in liver, small molecule biochemistry.

Validation using only the reported differentially methylated genes

Having identified the differentially methylated genes corresponding to the CpG sites in the promoter or the body of the genes through this integrative meta-analysis, we wanted to verify how many of these overlapped with the reported differentially methylated genes in those studies that did not include information on CpG sites. The Venn diagram in Figure 4 shows 165 genes reported genes in common with CpG sites in the promoter and 82 genes in common with CpG sites in the body (Supplementary Table 3).
Figure 4

Venn diagram intersecting three lists: (1) reported differentially methylated genes in HCC from studies not providing information on the corresponding CpG sites; (2) identified differentially methylated genes in HCC corresponding to CpG sites in promoter; and (3) identified differentially methylated genes in HCC corresponding to CpG sites in body of the gene.

Venn diagram intersecting three lists: (1) reported differentially methylated genes in HCC from studies not providing information on the corresponding CpG sites; (2) identified differentially methylated genes in HCC corresponding to CpG sites in promoter; and (3) identified differentially methylated genes in HCC corresponding to CpG sites in body of the gene.

DISCUSSION

The literature on the epigenome in HCC has grown since the advent of tools permitting genome-wide methylation analysis. Epigenetic changes in HCC arise in the context of various etiologies of chronic liver disease, and have been revealed to contribute to tumorigenesis and cancer progression. Therapeutic targeting of HCC has not been as successful as in other malignancies, and requires exploration of a different approach[34,35]. Given that this cancer is driven by various known environmental factors, targeting epigenetic changes in HCC represents a potentially promising therapeutic avenue[36]. The current study is the largest network-based integrative meta-analysis of all publicly available genome-wide DNA methylation data in HCC, with 354 HCC samples represented. These HCCs had arisen mainly in the context of viral hepatitis B and C, with only a few occurring in patients with alcoholic cirrhosis. Therefore, the literature on methylation in HCC is heavily weighted towards epigenetic changes from viral infection, and the aberrantly methylated genes in our analysis will likewise be influenced by the greater proportion of hepatitis B and C. Clinical information regarding tumor grade, disease stage, and survival were only available in around half of the datasets, thereby limiting the ability to correlate with histopathological characteristics and disease outcome. The genome-wide DNA methylation datasets included in our integrative analysis were published from 2010 to 2015. Network-based tools offer a different and unique perspective into the key genes and pathways implicated in disease pathogenesis and progression[37]. Network-based medicine is critical to a broader understanding of HCC, whose pathogenesis has been difficult to elucidate given the multiplicity of underlying liver disease etiologies[30]. Epigenetic changes impact genetic networks, and a network-based integrative meta-analysis is ideally suited to integrating and exploring effects of networks on disease pathogenesis[38]. Using IPA, we performed this integrative analysis in order to identify the most commonly aberrantly methylated genes and associated pathways. The most commonly hyper- and hypomethylated genes were identified. These included HIST1H2AJ, which is a histone-coding cell cycle gene previously also identified as hypermethylated in patient lung adenocarcinoma samples[37] and head and neck squamous cell carcinomas[39]. In a study investigating the genetic-and-epigenetic cell cycle network in HeLa cancer cells, methylation of HIST1H2AJ (among other genes) was found to result in cell proliferation and anti-apoptosis through NFκB, TGF-β, and PI3K/Akt/mTOR pathways[40]. HIST1H2AJ has not previously been highlighted as a gene of interest in HCC, which is a novel finding of our integrative analysis of methylation datasets. This illustrates the power of integrating all available high-throughput data to better understand important genes in cancer. SPDYA, a cell cycle regulator known to trigger transition from G1 to S phase, was differentially hypermethylated. The HRNBP3 gene, an RNA-binding protein, was the most commonly hypomethylated, as had been reported in the integrative analysis of epigenetic data by Song et al[16] in 2012. One would thereby anticipate increased gene expression of HRNBP3 in HCC. These genes with differential methylation have not previously been highlighted in the HCC literature, and serve as potential new biomarkers and therapeutic targets[41]. Using IPA, we then determined the most commonly affected networks in HCC. G-protein coupled receptor signaling, Transcriptional Regulatory Network in Embryonic Cells, cAMP-mediated signaling were the top hits, which was in perfect agreement with the work of Song et al[16], wherein they used IPA to analyze methylation profiling for a set of 27 HCC tumors compared with 20 normal patients. G-protein coupled receptor signalling is common to various principal pathways known to be implicated in HCC, including the PI3K/Akt/mTOR and Ras/Raf/MAPK pathways based on genomic and gene expression analyses. Therefore, our results reinforce the biological rationale of targeting these pathways. We also elucidated the crosstalk between proteins within the networks of interest to HCC. This analysis revealed ESR1 and ERK to be proteins central to they key networks. A unique aspect of our study was the analysis of methylation at CpG sites in both the promoter and body of genes. Whereas methylation in the gene promoter is known to cause transcriptional repression, methylation in the body has the opposite effect, promoting gene expression. A novel finding was that the genes with the greatest differential methylation in the promoter were the same as those with the greatest differential methylation in the body, further confirming the importance of these genes. We were also able to validate the identity of several genes with data on CpG sites within datasets without such data available. Limitations of our study include the lack of methylation data on individual HCC samples. Given the relatively recent advent of genome-wide methylation analysis methods, with the earliest dataset in HCC being released in 2010, this analysis was representative of only 354 samples in comparison to a similar number of non-cancerous liver samples. Nonetheless, our study is the largest integrative network-based analysis of DNA methylation in HCC. Clinicopathological characteristics such as grade, stage and survival were available only for half of the datasets, thereby limiting the ability to correlate these data points with the most aberrantly methylated genes. Finally, these data were most representative of hepatitis B and C, as described above. In conclusion, our integrative analysis of genome-wide DNA methylation represents the largest such study in HCC. By integrating all genome-wide DNA methylation data with network-based tools, we have systematically elucidated the landscape of epigenetic DNA modifications in HCC and identified novel potential biomarkers and targetable genes within known pathways of interest to HCC. Therapeutic targeting of the epigenome in HCC is a potential avenue to address this malignancy that arises in the context of various etiologies of chronic liver disease.

ARTICLE HIGHLIGHTS

Research background

The advent of high-throughput technologies in epigenetics has led to improved characterization of methylation status and its impact on development of Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC).

Research motivation

HCC is a malignancy that arises in the context of ongoing liver injury from various causes, such as hepatitis B, hepatitis C, alcoholic and non-alcoholic liver disease. Therefore, epigenetic changes are very likely to contribute to the pathogenesis of this malignancy.

Research objectives

We aimed to identify the key epigenetically modulated genes and pathways in HCC by performing an integrative meta-analysis of all major, well-annotated and publicly available methylation datasets using tools of network analysis.

Research methods

PubMed and Gene Expression Omnibus were searched for genome-wide DNA methylation datasets. Patient clinical and demographic characteristics were obtained. DNA methylation data were integrated using the Ingenuity Pathway Analysis, a software package for visualizing and analyzing biological networks. Pathway enrichment analysis was performed using IPA, which also provides literature-driven and computationally-predicted annotations for significant association of genes to curated molecular pathways.

Research results

From an initial 928 potential abstracts, we identified and analyzed 11 eligible high-throughput methylation datasets representing 354 patients. A significant proportion of studies did not provide concomitant clinical data. In the promoter region, HIST1H2AJ and SPDYA were the most commonly methylated, whereas HRNBP3 gene was the most commonly hypomethylated. ESR1 and ERK were central genes in the principal networks. The pathways most associated with the frequently methylated genes were G-protein coupled receptor and cAMP-mediated signalling.

Research conclusions

Using an integrative network-based analysis approach of genome-wide DNA methylation data of both the promoter and body of genes, we identified G-protein coupled receptor signalling as the most highly associated with HCC. This encompasses a diverse range of cancer pathways, such as the PI3K/Akt/mTOR and Ras/Raf/MAPK pathways, and is therefore supportive of previous literature on gene expression in HCC. However, there are novel targetable genes such as HIST1H2AJ that are epigenetically modified, suggesting their potential as biomarkers and for therapeutic targeting of the HCC epigenome.

Research perspectives

Our integrative analysis of genome-wide DNA methylation represents the largest such study in HCC. By integrating all genome-wide DNA methylation data with network-based tools, we have systematically elucidated the landscape of epigenetic DNA modifications in HCC and identified novel potential biomarkers and targetable genes within known pathways of interest to HCC. Therapeutic targeting of the epigenome in HCC is a potential avenue to address this malignancy that arises in the context of various etiologies of chronic liver disease.
  38 in total

1.  The role of DNA methylation in mammalian epigenetics.

Authors:  P A Jones; D Takai
Journal:  Science       Date:  2001-08-10       Impact factor: 47.728

2.  High frequency of promoter hypermethylation of RASSF1A in tumor and plasma of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma.

Authors:  Winnie Yeo; Nathalie Wong; Wai-Lap Wong; Paul B S Lai; Sheng Zhong; Philip J Johnson
Journal:  Liver Int       Date:  2005-04       Impact factor: 5.828

3.  Identification of epigenetically inactivated genes in human hepatocellular carcinoma by integrative analyses of methylation profiling and pharmacological unmasking.

Authors:  Naoshi Nishida; Hirokazu Chishina; Tadaaki Arizumi; Masahiro Takita; Satoshi Kitai; Norihisa Yada; Satoru Hagiwara; Tatsuo Inoue; Yasunori Minami; Kazuomi Ueshima; Toshiharu Sakurai; Masatoshi Kudo
Journal:  Dig Dis       Date:  2014-10-29       Impact factor: 2.404

4.  p16(INK4) is inactivated by extensive CpG methylation in human hepatocellular carcinoma.

Authors:  Y Matsuda; T Ichida; J Matsuzawa; K Sugimura; H Asakura
Journal:  Gastroenterology       Date:  1999-02       Impact factor: 22.682

5.  DNA methylation profiling identifies EYA4 gene as a prognostic molecular marker in hepatocellular carcinoma.

Authors:  Xun Hou; Jian-Xin Peng; Xiao-Yi Hao; Jian-Peng Cai; Li-Jian Liang; Jing-Ming Zhai; Kun-Song Zhang; Jia-Ming Lai; Xiao-Yu Yin
Journal:  Ann Surg Oncol       Date:  2013-12-04       Impact factor: 5.344

Review 6.  Reactivating the expression of methylation silenced genes in human cancer.

Authors:  Adam R Karpf; David A Jones
Journal:  Oncogene       Date:  2002-08-12       Impact factor: 9.867

7.  High-throughput assessment of CpG site methylation for distinguishing between HCV-cirrhosis and HCV-associated hepatocellular carcinoma.

Authors:  Kellie J Archer; Valeria R Mas; Daniel G Maluf; Robert A Fisher
Journal:  Mol Genet Genomics       Date:  2010-02-18       Impact factor: 3.291

8.  Management of hepatocellular carcinoma: an update.

Authors:  Jordi Bruix; Morris Sherman
Journal:  Hepatology       Date:  2011-03       Impact factor: 17.425

9.  Integrative analysis of 111 reference human epigenomes.

Authors:  Anshul Kundaje; Wouter Meuleman; Jason Ernst; Misha Bilenky; Angela Yen; Alireza Heravi-Moussavi; Pouya Kheradpour; Zhizhuo Zhang; Jianrong Wang; Michael J Ziller; Viren Amin; John W Whitaker; Matthew D Schultz; Lucas D Ward; Abhishek Sarkar; Gerald Quon; Richard S Sandstrom; Matthew L Eaton; Yi-Chieh Wu; Andreas R Pfenning; Xinchen Wang; Melina Claussnitzer; Yaping Liu; Cristian Coarfa; R Alan Harris; Noam Shoresh; Charles B Epstein; Elizabeta Gjoneska; Danny Leung; Wei Xie; R David Hawkins; Ryan Lister; Chibo Hong; Philippe Gascard; Andrew J Mungall; Richard Moore; Eric Chuah; Angela Tam; Theresa K Canfield; R Scott Hansen; Rajinder Kaul; Peter J Sabo; Mukul S Bansal; Annaick Carles; Jesse R Dixon; Kai-How Farh; Soheil Feizi; Rosa Karlic; Ah-Ram Kim; Ashwinikumar Kulkarni; Daofeng Li; Rebecca Lowdon; GiNell Elliott; Tim R Mercer; Shane J Neph; Vitor Onuchic; Paz Polak; Nisha Rajagopal; Pradipta Ray; Richard C Sallari; Kyle T Siebenthall; Nicholas A Sinnott-Armstrong; Michael Stevens; Robert E Thurman; Jie Wu; Bo Zhang; Xin Zhou; Arthur E Beaudet; Laurie A Boyer; Philip L De Jager; Peggy J Farnham; Susan J Fisher; David Haussler; Steven J M Jones; Wei Li; Marco A Marra; Michael T McManus; Shamil Sunyaev; James A Thomson; Thea D Tlsty; Li-Huei Tsai; Wei Wang; Robert A Waterland; Michael Q Zhang; Lisa H Chadwick; Bradley E Bernstein; Joseph F Costello; Joseph R Ecker; Martin Hirst; Alexander Meissner; Aleksandar Milosavljevic; Bing Ren; John A Stamatoyannopoulos; Ting Wang; Manolis Kellis
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2015-02-19       Impact factor: 69.504

10.  Investigating core genetic-and-epigenetic cell cycle networks for stemness and carcinogenic mechanisms, and cancer drug design using big database mining and genome-wide next-generation sequencing data.

Authors:  Cheng-Wei Li; Bor-Sen Chen
Journal:  Cell Cycle       Date:  2016-06-13       Impact factor: 4.534

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  6 in total

1.  BEZ235 increases sorafenib inhibition of hepatocellular carcinoma cells by suppressing the PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway.

Authors:  Amin Li; Rongbo Zhang; Yinci Zhang; Xueke Liu; Ruikai Wang; Jiachang Liu; Xinkuang Liu; Yinghai Xie; Weiya Cao; Ruyue Xu; Yongfang Ma; Wenpeng Cai; Binquan Wu; Shuyu Cai; Xiaolong Tang
Journal:  Am J Transl Res       Date:  2019-09-15       Impact factor: 4.060

2.  Genome-Wide Open Chromatin Methylome Profiles in Colorectal Cancer.

Authors:  Muhiddin Ishak; Rashidah Baharudin; Isa Mohamed Rose; Ismail Sagap; Luqman Mazlan; Zairul Azwan Mohd Azman; Nadiah Abu; Rahman Jamal; Learn-Han Lee; Nurul Syakima Ab Mutalib
Journal:  Biomolecules       Date:  2020-05-05

3.  Integrative Analysis of DNA Methylation and microRNA Expression Reveals Mechanisms of Racial Heterogeneity in Hepatocellular Carcinoma.

Authors:  Rency S Varghese; Megan E Barefoot; Sidharth Jain; Yifan Chen; Yunxi Zhang; Amber Alley; Alexander H Kroemer; Mahlet G Tadesse; Deepak Kumar; Zaki A Sherif; Habtom W Ressom
Journal:  Front Genet       Date:  2021-09-07       Impact factor: 4.599

Review 4.  Molecular Mechanisms of Hepatocarcinogenesis Following Sustained Virological Response in Patients with Chronic Hepatitis C Virus Infection.

Authors:  C Nelson Hayes; Peiyi Zhang; Yizhou Zhang; Kazuaki Chayama
Journal:  Viruses       Date:  2018-09-28       Impact factor: 5.048

Review 5.  Epigenetics of hepatocellular carcinoma.

Authors:  Tan Boon Toh; Jhin Jieh Lim; Edward Kai-Hua Chow
Journal:  Clin Transl Med       Date:  2019-05-06

Review 6.  Epigenetic remodelling in human hepatocellular carcinoma.

Authors:  Maria Rita Braghini; Oriana Lo Re; Ilaria Romito; Maite G Fernandez-Barrena; Barbara Barbaro; Silvia Pomella; Rossella Rota; Manlio Vinciguerra; Matias A Avila; Anna Alisi
Journal:  J Exp Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2022-03-24
  6 in total

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