Abstract

Cancer invasion and metastasis is the most morbid aspect of cancer and is governed by different cellular mechanisms than those driving the deregulated growth of tumors. We addressed here the question of whether a common DNA methylation signature of invasion exists in cancer cells from different origins that differentiates invasive from non-invasive cells. We identified a common DNA methylation signature consisting of hyper- and hypomethylation and determined the overlap of differences in DNA methylation with differences in mRNA expression using expression array analyses. A pathway analysis reveals that the hypomethylation signature includes some of the major pathways that were previously implicated in cancer migration and invasion such as TGF beta and ERBB2 triggered pathways. The relevance of these hypomethylation events in human tumors was validated by identification of the signature in several publicly available databases of human tumor transcriptomes. We shortlisted novel invasion promoting candidates and tested the role of four genes in cellular invasiveness from the list C11orf68, G0S2, SHISA2 and TMEM156 in invasiveness using siRNA depletion. Importantly these genes are upregulated in human cancer specimens as determined by immunostaining of human normal and cancer breast, liver and prostate tissue arrays. Since these genes are activated in cancer they constitute a group of targets for specific pharmacological inhibitors of cancer invasiveness. Our study provides evidence that common DNA hypomethylation signature exists between cancer cells derived from different tissues, pointing to a common mechanism of cancer invasiveness in cancer cells from different origins that could serve as drug targets.

Highlights

  • Invasion and growth regulation in cancer are distinctive processes and it stands to reason that they involve different sets of gene expression alterations driven by DNA methylation

  • SUMMARY: Our study provides evidence that common DNA hypomethylation signature exists between cancer cells derived from different tissues, pointing to a common mechanism of cancer invasiveness in cancer cells from different origins that could serve as drug targets

  • We compared genome wide DNA methylation profiles of three invasive cancer cell lines derived from breast, liver and prostate cancers and their low invasive counterparts using Illumina 450K bead arrays and identified a common DNA methylation signature for invasive cell lines from different origins

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Summary

Introduction

Invasion and growth regulation in cancer are distinctive processes and it stands to reason that they involve different sets of gene expression alterations driven by DNA methylation. More recently several studies implicated activation of gene expression through hypomethylation of several prometastatic genes in breast [4], liver [5] and prostate cancer [6]. DNA methylation profiles of cancer cells from different origins differ widely from each other. It stands to reason that fundamental mechanisms are shared amongst cancers from different origins and these should be captured in DNA methylation profiles even in cancer cell lines. We compared genome wide DNA methylation profiles of three invasive cancer cell lines derived from breast, liver and prostate cancers and their low invasive counterparts using Illumina 450K bead arrays and identified a common DNA methylation signature for invasive cell lines from different origins. We determined whether such a signature is present in publicly available gene expression and DNA methylation data of metastatic tumor clinical samples

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