Premium
A DNA hypermethylation profile reveals new potential biomarkers for the evaluation of prognosis in urothelial bladder cancer
Author(s) -
López Jose I.,
Angulo Javier C.,
Martín Ana,
SánchezChapado Manuel,
GonzálezCorpas Ana,
Colás Begoña,
Ropero Santiago
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
apmis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.909
H-Index - 88
eISSN - 1600-0463
pISSN - 0903-4641
DOI - 10.1111/apm.12719
Subject(s) - dna methylation , bladder cancer , cancer research , biology , methylation , cancer , gene silencing , biomarker , oncology , gene , medicine , genetics , gene expression
DNA hypermethylation has emerged as a molecular biomarker for the evaluation of cancer diagnosis and prognosis. We define a methylation signature of bladder cancer and evaluate whether this profile assesses prognosis of patients. Genome‐wide methylation analysis was performed on 70 tumor and 10 normal bladder samples. Hypermethylation status of 1505 CpGs present in the promoter region of 807 genes was studied. Thirty‐three genes were significantly hypermethylated in ≥10% of the tumors. Three clusters of patients were characterized by their DNA methylation profile, one at higher risk of dead of disease (p = 0.0012). Association between cluster distribution and stage (p = 0.02) or grade (p = 0.02) was demonstrated. Hypermethylation of JAK 3 and absence of hypermethylation of EYA 4 , GAT 6 , and SOX 1 were associated with low‐grade non‐invasive disease. On the other hand, in high‐grade invasive disease hypermethylation of CSPG 2 , HOXA 11 , HOXA 9 , HS 3 ST 2 , SOX 1 , and TWIST 1 was associated with muscle invasiveness. A panel of hypermethylated genes including APC , CSPG 2 , EPHA 5 , EYA 4 , HOXA 9 , IPF 1 , ISL 1 , JAK 3 , PITX 2 , SOX 1 , and TWIST 1 predicted cancer‐specific survival and SOX 1 ( HR = 3.46), PITX 2 ( HR = 4.17), CSPG 2 ( HR = 5.35), and JAK 3 hypermethylation ( HR = 0.19) did so independently. Silencing of genes by hypermethylation is a common event in bladder cancer and could be used to develop diagnostic and prognostic markers. Combined hypermethylation of SOX 1 , PITX 2 , or CSPG 2 signals patients at higher risk of death from bladder cancer.