| Literature DB >> 29964205 |
Leonel Maldonado1, Mariana Brait2, Evgeny Izumchenko2, Shahnaz Begum3, Aditi Chatterjee4, Tanusree Sen2, Myriam Loyo5, Alvaro Barbosa6, Maria Luana Poeta7, Eugene Makarev8, Alex Zhavoronkov8, Vito M Fazio9, Roberto Angioli10, Carla Rabitti11, Mate Ongenaert12, Wim Van Criekinge12, Maartje G Noordhuis13, Pauline de Graeff14, G Bea A Wisman14, Ate G J van der Zee14, Mohammad O Hoque15.
Abstract
Many epigenetically inactivated genes involved in ovarian cancer (OC) development and progression remain to be identified. In this study we undertook an integrated approach that consisted of identification of genome-wide expression patterns of primary OC samples and normal ovarian surface epithelium along with a pharmacologic unmasking strategy using 3 OC and 3 immortalized normal ovarian epithelial cell lines. Our filtering scheme identified 43 OC specific methylated genes and among the 5 top candidates (GULP1, CLIP4, BAMBI, NT5E, TGFβ2), we performed extended studies of GULP1. In a training set, we identified GULP1 methylation in 21/61 (34%) of cases with 100% specificity. In an independent cohort, the observed methylation was 40% (146/365) in OC, 12.5% (2/16) in borderline tumors, 11% (2/18) in cystadenoma and 0% (0/13) in normal ovarian epithelium samples. GULP1 methylation was associated with clinicopathological parameters such as stage III/IV (p = 0.001), poorly differentiated grade (p = 0.033), residual disease (p < 0.0003), worse overall (p = 0.02) and disease specific survival (p = 0.01). Depletion of GULP1 in OC cells led to increased pro-survival signaling, inducing survival and colony formation, whereas reconstitution of GULP1 negated these effects, suggesting that GULP1 is required for maintaining cellular growth control.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarkers; DNA methylation; Epigenetics; GULP1; Ovarian cancer
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29964205 DOI: 10.1016/j.canlet.2018.06.030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Lett ISSN: 0304-3835 Impact factor: 9.756