| Literature DB >> 35447336 |
Gerhard Jung1, Eva Hernández-Illán2, Juan J Lozano3, Julia Sidorova3, Jenifer Muñoz4, Yasuyuki Okada5, Enrique Quintero6, Goretti Hernandez6, Rodrigo Jover7, Sabela Carballal1, Miriam Cuatrecasas8, Lorena Moreno1, Mireia Diaz1, Teresa Ocaña1, Ariadna Sánchez1, Liseth Rivero1, Oswaldo Ortiz1, Joan Llach1, Antoni Castells1, Maria Pellisé1, Ajay Goel9, Eduard Batlle10, Francesc Balaguer11.
Abstract
Serrated polyposis syndrome (SPS) is associated with a high risk for colorectal cancer. Intense promoter hypermethylation is a frequent molecular finding in the serrated pathway and may be present in normal mucosa, predisposing to the formation of serrated lesions. To identify novel biomarkers for SPS, fresh-frozen samples of normal mucosa from 50 patients with SPS and 19 healthy individuals were analyzed by using the 850K BeadChip Technology (Infinium). Aberrant methylation levels were correlated with gene expression using a next-generation transcriptome profiling tool. Two validation steps were performed on independent cohorts: first, on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue of the normal mucosa; and second, on 24 serrated lesions. The most frequently hypermethylated genes were HLA-F, SLFN12, HLA-DMA, and RARRES3; and the most frequently hypomethylated genes were PIWIL1 and ANK3 (Δβ = 10%; P < 0.05). Expression levels of HLA-F, SLFN12, and HLA-DMA were significantly different between SPS patients and healthy individuals and correlated well with the methylation status of the corresponding differentially methylated region (fold change, >20%; r > 0.55; P < 0.001). Significant hypermethylation of CpGs in the gene body of HLA-F was also found in serrated lesions (Δβ = 23%; false discovery rate = 0.01). Epigenome-wide methylation profiling has revealed numerous differentially methylated CpGs in normal mucosa from SPS patients. Significant hypermethylation of HLA-F is a novel biomarker candidate for SPS.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35447336 PMCID: PMC9228001 DOI: 10.1016/j.jmoldx.2022.03.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mol Diagn ISSN: 1525-1578 Impact factor: 5.341