Abstract

BackgroundKDM lysine demethylase family members are related to lung cancer clinical outcomes and are potential biomarkers for chemotherapeutics. However, little is known about epigenetic alterations in KDM genes and their roles in lung cancer survival.MethodsTumor tissue samples of 1230 early-stage non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients were collected from the five independent cohorts. The 393 methylation sites in KDM genes were extracted from epigenome-wide datasets and analyzed by weighted random forest (Ranger) in discovery phase and validation dataset, respectively. The variable importance scores (VIS) for the sites in top 5% of both discovery and validation sets were carried forward for Cox regression to further evaluate the association with patient’s overall survival. TCGA transcriptomic data were used to evaluate the correlation with the corresponding DNA methylation.ResultsDNA methylation at sites cg11637544 in KDM2A and cg26662347 in KDM1A were in the top 5% of VIS in both discovery phase and validation for squamous cell carcinomas (SCC), which were also significantly associated with SCC survival (HRcg11637544 = 1.32, 95%CI, 1.16–1.50, P = 1.1 × 10−4; HRcg26662347 = 1.88, 95%CI, 1.37–2.60, P = 3.7 × 10−3), and correlated with corresponding gene expression (cg11637544 for KDM2A, P = 1.3 × 10−10; cg26662347 for KDM1A P = 1.5 × 10−5). In addition, by using flexible criteria for Ranger analysis followed by survival classification tree analysis, we identified four clusters for adenocarcinomas and five clusters for squamous cell carcinomas which showed a considerable difference of clinical outcomes with statistical significance.ConclusionsThese findings highlight the association between somatic DNA methylation in KDM genes and early-stage NSCLC patient survival, which may reveal potential epigenetic therapeutic targets.

Highlights

  • KDM lysine demethylase family members are related to lung cancer clinical outcomes and are potential biomarkers for chemotherapeutics

  • HumanN6-methyllysine residue demethylation is catalyzed by two distinct subfamilies of demethylases—the flavin-dependent KDM1 subfamily and the JmjC-domain containing KDM2-8 subfamily, which regulate the chromatin state at specific loci, and impact gene expression, DNA repair, DNA replication, and genome stability [6]

  • We analyzed 393 DNA methylation probes (Additional file 2: Table S1) in 17 KDM gene family members located on autosomal chromosomes (Additional file 3: Table S2)

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Summary

Introduction

KDM lysine demethylase family members are related to lung cancer clinical outcomes and are potential biomarkers for chemotherapeutics. Little is known about epigenetic alterations in KDM genes and their roles in lung cancer survival. Methylation changes at histone demethylase KDM gene family are broadly involved in. Wei et al Clinical Epigenetics (2018) 10:41 cancer development [5, 6]. It provides a source of potential biomarkers and therapeutic targets in cancer [7, 8]. DNA methylation is an important gene regulator that provides epigenetic therapeutic targets in cancer. To date, no studies have examined the role of DNA methylation in KDM demethylase genes and its relationship to clinical outcomes of lung cancer patients

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