Abstract

p14(ARF) is a putative tumor suppressor gene thought to modify the levels of p53. CpG sites within the 5'-flanking region and exon 1beta of p14(ARF) are targets of aberrant methylation and transcriptional silencing in human colorectal cancer (CRC). Here we have developed methylation-specific polymerase chain reaction (MSPCR) methods to detect methylation of CpG sites in p14(ARF) in CRC cell lines and primary CRC tumors, and correlated p14(ARF) mRNA expression with methylation in CRC cell lines using competitive quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction methods. Ten CRC cell lines were studied; three (DLD-1, HCT15 and SW48) showed extensive methylation and six (Colo320, SW480, HT29, Caco2, SW837 and WiDr) were unmethylated; the other cell line, LoVo, showed partial methylation that affected exon 1beta but not the immediate upstream CpG sites. p14(ARF) mRNA was expressed at extremely low levels in fully methylated cell lines and at 10(4)- to 10(5)-fold higher levels in unmethylated cell lines. p14(ARF) expression in the partially methylated LoVo cell line was intermediate. Treatment of LoVo cells with 2 microM 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine for 72 h was associated with marked (100-fold) induction of mRNA levels. Of 119 primary CRCs, 18% contained p14(ARF) methylation, although partial methylation was the most common pattern observed (in 67% of methylated tumors). Methylation of p14(ARF) was often accompanied by p16(INK4a) methylation; however, 50% of p14(ARF) methylated tumors contained unmethylated p16(INK4a). Methylation at p14(ARF) was associated with female gender, greater age, proximal anatomic location and poor differentiation, but not stage at diagnosis. A two-step MSPCR method for assaying p14(ARF) methylation in human tumors is described.

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