RGD Reference Report - Differential DNA methylation profiles in gynecological cancers and correlation with clinico-pathological data. - Rat Genome Database

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Differential DNA methylation profiles in gynecological cancers and correlation with clinico-pathological data.

Authors: Yang, HJ  Liu, VW  Wang, Y  Tsang, PC  Ngan, HY 
Citation: Yang HJ, etal., BMC Cancer. 2006 Aug 23;6:212.
RGD ID: 2290585
Pubmed: PMID:16928264   (View Abstract at PubMed)
PMCID: PMC1560388   (View Article at PubMed Central)
DOI: DOI:10.1186/1471-2407-6-212   (Journal Full-text)

BACKGROUND: Epigenetic gene silencing is one of the major causes of carcinogenesis. Its widespread occurrence in cancer genome could inactivate many cellular pathways including DNA repair, cell cycle control, apoptosis, cell adherence, and detoxification. The abnormal promoter methylation might be a potential molecular marker for cancer management. METHODS: For rapid identification of potential targets for aberrant methylation in gynecological cancers, methylation status of the CpG islands of 34 genes was determined using pooled DNA approach and methylation-specific PCR. Pooled DNA mixture from each cancer type (50 cervical cancers, 50 endometrial cancers and 50 ovarian cancers) was made to form three test samples. The corresponding normal DNA from the patients of each cancer type was also pooled to form the other three control samples. Methylated alleles detected in tumors, but not in normal controls, were indicative of aberrant methylation in tumors. Having identified potential markers, frequencies of methylation were further analyzed in individual samples. Markers identified are used to correlate with clinico-pathological data of tumors using chi2 or Fisher's exact test. RESULTS: APC and p16 were hypermethylated across the three cancers. MINT31 and PTEN were hypermethylated in cervical and ovarian cancers. Specific methylation was found in cervical cancer (including CDH1, DAPK, MGMT and MINT2), endometrial cancer (CASP8, CDH13, hMLH1 and p73), and ovarian cancer (BRCA1, p14, p15, RIZ1 and TMS1). The frequencies of occurrence of hypermethylation in 4 candidate genes in individual samples of each cancer type (DAPK, MGMT, p16 and PTEN in 127 cervical cancers; APC, CDH13, hMLH1 and p16 in 60 endometrial cancers; and BRCA1, p14, p16 and PTEN in 49 ovarian cancers) were examined for further confirmation. Incidence varied among different genes and in different cancer types ranging from the lowest 8.2% (PTEN in ovarian cancer) to the highest 56.7% (DAPK in cervical cancer). Aberrant methylation for some genes (BRCA1, DAPK, hMLH1, MGMT, p14, p16, and PTEN) was also associated with clinico-pathological data. CONCLUSION: Thus, differential methylation profiles occur in the three types of gynecologic cancer. Detection of methylation for critical loci is potentially useful as epigenetic markers in tumor classification. More studies using a much larger sample size are needed to define the potential role of DNA methylation as marker for cancer management.

RGD Manual Disease Annotations    Click to see Annotation Detail View
TermQualifierEvidenceWithReferenceNotesSourceOriginal Reference(s)
Endometrial Neoplasms  IAGP 2290585DNA:hypermethylationRGD 
Endometrial Neoplasms  ISOTP73 (Homo sapiens)2290585; 2290585DNA:hypermethylationRGD 

Objects Annotated

Genes (Rattus norvegicus)
Tp73  (tumor protein p73)

Genes (Mus musculus)
Trp73  (transformation related protein 73)

Genes (Homo sapiens)
TP73  (tumor protein p73)


Additional Information