Mechanistic and prognostic significance of aberrant methylation in the molecular pathogenesis of human hepatocellular carcinoma

被引:328
作者
Calvisi, Diego F.
Ladu, Sara
Gorden, Alexis
Farina, Miriam
Lee, Ju-Seog
Conner, Elizabeth A.
Schroeder, Insa
Factor, Valentina M.
Thorgeirsson, Snorri S.
机构
[1] NIH, NCI, Canc Res Ctr, Lab Expt Carcinogenesis, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA
[2] Univ Sassari, Dept Biomed Sci, Div Expt Pathol & Oncol, I-07100 Sassari, Italy
关键词
D O I
10.1172/JCI31457
中图分类号
R-3 [医学研究方法]; R3 [基础医学];
学科分类号
1001 ;
摘要
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the fifth most common cancer worldwide, accounting for an estimated 600,000 deaths annually. Aberrant methylation, consisting of DNA hypomethylation and/or promoter gene CpG hypermethylation, is implicated in the development of a variety of solid tumors, including HCC. We analyzed the global levels of DNA methylation as well as the methylation status of 105 putative tumor suppressor genes and found that the extent of genome-wide hypomethylation and CpG hypermethylation correlates with biological features and clinical outcome of HCC patients. We identified activation of Ras and downstream Ras effectors (ERK, AKT, and RAL) due to epigenetic silencing of inhibitors of the Ras pathway in all HCC. Further, selective inactivation of SPRY1 and -2, DAB2, and SOCS4 and -5 genes and inhibitors of angiogenesis (BNIP3, BNIP3L, IGFBP3, and EGLN2) was associated with poor prognosis. Importantly, several epigenetically silenced putative tumor suppressor genes found in HCC were also inactivated in the nontumorous liver. Our results assign both therapeutic and chemopreventive significance to methylation patterns in human HCC and open the possibility of using molecular targets, including those identified in this study, to effectively inhibit HCC development and progression.
引用
收藏
页码:2713 / 2722
页数:10
相关论文
共 78 条
[1]   The random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) assay and related techniques applied to genotoxicity and carcinogenesis studies: A critical review [J].
Atienzar, Franck A. ;
Jha, Awadhesh N. .
MUTATION RESEARCH-REVIEWS IN MUTATION RESEARCH, 2006, 613 (2-3) :76-102
[2]   Oncogenic PI3K deregulates transcription and translation [J].
Bader, AG ;
Kang, SY ;
Zhao, L ;
Vogt, PK .
NATURE REVIEWS CANCER, 2005, 5 (12) :921-929
[3]   Hypermethylation in histologically distinct classes of breast cancer [J].
Bae, YK ;
Brown, A ;
Garrett, E ;
Bornman, D ;
Fackler, MJ ;
Sukumar, S ;
Herman, JG ;
Gabrielson, E .
CLINICAL CANCER RESEARCH, 2004, 10 (18) :5998-6005
[4]   Mechanisms underlying epigenetically mediated gene silencing in cancer [J].
Baylin, SB .
SEMINARS IN CANCER BIOLOGY, 2002, 12 (05) :331-337
[5]   DNMT1 knockout delivers a strong blow to genome stability and cell viability [J].
Brown, Kevin D. ;
Robertson, Keith D. .
NATURE GENETICS, 2007, 39 (03) :289-290
[6]   Focus on hepatocellular carcinoma [J].
Bruix, J ;
Boix, L ;
Sala, M ;
Llovet, JM .
CANCER CELL, 2004, 5 (03) :215-219
[7]   Ubiquitous activation of Ras and Jak/Stat pathways in human HCC [J].
Calvisi, DF ;
Ladu, S ;
Gorden, A ;
Farina, M ;
Conner, EA ;
Lee, JS ;
Factor, VM ;
Thorgeirsson, SS .
GASTROENTEROLOGY, 2006, 130 (04) :1117-1128
[8]   Disruption of β-catenin pathway or genomic instability define two distinct categories of liver cancer in transgenic mice [J].
Calvisi, DF ;
Factor, VM ;
Ladu, S ;
Conner, EA ;
Thorgeirsson, SS .
GASTROENTEROLOGY, 2004, 126 (05) :1374-1386
[9]  
Calvisi DF, 2001, CANCER RES, V61, P2085
[10]   DNA hypomethylation leads to elevated mutation rates [J].
Chen, RZ ;
Pettersson, U ;
Beard, C ;
Jackson-Grusby, L ;
Jaenisch, R .
NATURE, 1998, 395 (6697) :89-93