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Promoter Methylation of RASSF1A Associates to Adult Secondary Glioblastomas and Pediatric Glioblastomas
Author(s) -
Jorge Muñoz,
María del Mar Inda,
Paula Lázcoz,
Idoya Zazpe,
Xing Fan,
Jorge Alfaro,
T. Tuñón,
Juan A. Rey,
Javier S. Castresana
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
isrn neurology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-5513
pISSN - 2090-5505
DOI - 10.5402/2012/576578
Subject(s) - pten , cancer research , methylation , tumor suppressor gene , epigenetics , dna methylation , biology , astrocytoma , glioma , gene , gene expression , carcinogenesis , genetics , signal transduction , pi3k/akt/mtor pathway
While allelic losses and mutations of tumor suppressor genes implicated in the etiology of astrocytoma have been widely assessed, the role of epigenetics is still a matter of study. We analyzed the frequency of promoter hypermethylation by methylation-specific PCR (MSP) in five tumor suppressor genes (PTEN, MGMT, RASSF1A, p14 ARF , and p16 INK4A ), in astrocytoma samples and cell lines. RASSF1A was the most frequently hypermethylated gene in all grades of astrocytoma samples, in cell lines, and in adult secondary GBM. It was followed by MGMT. PTEN showed a slight methylation signal in only one GBM and one pilocytic astrocytoma, and in two cell lines; while p14 ARF and p16 INK4A did not show any evidence of methylation in primary tumors or cell lines. In pediatric GBM, RASSF1A was again the most frequently altered gene, followed by MGMT; PTEN, p14 and p16 showed no alterations. Lack or reduced expression of RASSF1A in cell lines was correlated with the presence of methylation. RASSF1A promoter hypermethylation might be used as a diagnostic marker for secondary GBM and pediatric GBM. Promoter hypermethylation might not be an important inactivation mechanism in other genes like PTEN, p14 ARF and p16 INK4A , in which other alterations (mutations, homozygous deletions) are prevalent.

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