DNA Hypomethylation Arises Later in Prostate Cancer Progression than CpG Island Hypermethylation and Contributes to Metastatic Tumor Heterogeneity
Open Access
- 30 October 2008
- journal article
- Published by American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) in Cancer Research
- Vol. 68 (21), 8954-8967
- https://doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.can-07-6088
Abstract
Hypomethylation of CpG dinucleotides in genomic DNA was one of the first somatic epigenetic alterations discovered in human cancers. DNA hypomethylation is postulated to occur very early in almost all human cancers, perhaps facilitating genetic instability and cancer initiation and progression. We therefore examined the nature, extent, and timing of DNA hypomethylation changes in human prostate cancer. Contrary to the prevailing view that global DNA hypomethylation changes occur extremely early in all human cancers, we show that reductions in 5meC content in the genome occur very late in prostate cancer progression, appearing at a significant extent only at the stage of metastatic disease. Furthermore, we found that, whereas some LINE1 promoter hypomethylation does occur in primary prostate cancers compared with normal tissues, this LINE1 hypomethylation is significantly more pronounced in metastatic prostate cancer. Next, we carried out a tiered gene expression microarray and bisulfite genomic sequencing–based approach to identify genes that are silenced by CpG island methylation in normal prostate cells but become overexpressed in prostate cancer cells as a result of CpG island hypomethylation. Through this analysis, we show that a class of cancer testis antigen genes undergoes CpG island hypomethylation and overexpression in primary prostate cancers, but more so in metastatic prostate cancers. Finally, we show that DNA hypomethylation patterns are quite heterogeneous across different metastatic sites within the same patients. These findings provide evidence that DNA hypomethylation changes occur later in prostate carcinogenesis than the CpG island hypermethylation changes and occur heterogeneously during prostate cancer progression and metastatic dissemination. [Cancer Res 2008;68(21):8954–67]Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 56 references indexed in Scilit:
- Intra-individual Change Over Time in DNA Methylation With Familial ClusteringJAMA, 2008
- Nuclear MYC protein overexpression is an early alteration in human prostate carcinogenesisLaboratory Investigation, 2008
- Treatment of Metastatic Melanoma with Autologous CD4+ T Cells against NY-ESO-1New England Journal of Medicine, 2008
- A gene expression bar code for microarray dataNature Methods, 2007
- Analysis of tissue-specific differentially methylated regions (TDMs) in humansGenomics, 2007
- DNA copy number alterations in prostate cancers: A combined analysis of published CGH studiesThe Prostate, 2007
- Global DNA demethylation in gastrointestinal cancer is age dependent and precedes genomic damageCancer Cell, 2006
- The epigenetic progenitor origin of human cancerNature Reviews Genetics, 2006
- Transcriptional regulation of the human LINE-1 retrotransposon L1.2BMolecular Genetics and Genomics, 2003
- Initial sequencing and analysis of the human genomeNature, 2001