Hypermethylation‐associated transcriptional silencing of E‐cadherin in primary sporadic colorectal carcinomas
- 8 October 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Pathology
- Vol. 198 (4), 442-449
- https://doi.org/10.1002/path.1237
Abstract
Loss of E (epithelial)-cadherin expression has been previously documented in sporadic colorectal carcinomas (SCRCs), but not as a consequence of mutations or allelic loss. In this study, the methylation status of the E-cadherin promoter was examined by utilizing the methylation-specific polymerase chain reaction (MSP) assay in 63 primary SCRCs and paired adjacent normal tissues. This was correlated with E-cadherin expression at both the RNA and the protein levels using multiplex reverse transcription (RT)-PCR and immunohistochemistry (IHC), respectively. Data were associated with the patients' clinicopathological features. Methylated alleles were present in 34/61 (56%) of the samples examined. Decreased E-cadherin mRNA expression was demonstrated in 29/61 carcinomas (47.5%) and was significantly associated with lymph node (LN) metastases (p = 0.03, Kruskal–Wallis) and tumour stages Astler-Coller B1 and B2 (p = 0.01, chi2). E-cadherin IHC expression was significantly associated with the absence of LN metastases (p = 0.01, chi2) and tumour stages Astler-Coller B1 and B2 (p = 0.002, Kruskal–Wallis) in 28/63 (44.4%) of the samples examined. Twenty-three out of 29 (79.3%) samples with decreased mRNA expression and 20/33 (60.6%) with detected protein expression revealed methylated (p = 0.03, Kruskal–Wallis) and unmethylated (p = 0.01, Kruskal–Wallis) alleles, respectively. In agreement with previous work demonstrating that somatic mutations and loss of heterozygosity of the E-cadherin gene are rare or absent in the majority of SCRCs studied so far, this study reports a consistent and uniform decrease or absence of E-cadherin expression, associated with aberrant methylation, in the majority of carcinomas examined, suggesting an epigenetically mediated loss of E-cadherin function in these carcinomas. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.Keywords
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