Abstract

BackgroundChanges in DNA methylation of crucial cancer genes including tumor suppressors can occur early in carcinogenesis, being potentially important early indicators of cancer. The objective of this study was to examine a multiplexed approach to assess the methylation of tumor suppressor genes as tumor stratification and clinical outcome prognostic biomarkers for lung cancer.MethodsA multicandidate probe panel interrogated DNA for aberrant methylation status in 18 tumor suppressor genes in lung cancer using a methylation-specific multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification assay (MS-MLPA). Lung cancer cell lines (n = 7), and primary lung tumors (n = 54) were examined using MS-MLPA.ResultsGenes frequently methylated in lung cancer cell lines including SCGB3A1, ID4, CCND2 were found among the most commonly methylated in the lung tumors analyzed. HLTF, BNIP3, H2AFX, CACNA1G, TGIF, ID4 and CACNA1A were identified as novel tumor suppressor candidates methylated in lung tumors. The most frequently methylated genes in lung tumors were SCGB3A1 and DLC1 (both 50.0%). Methylation rates for ID4, DCL1, BNIP3, H2AFX, CACNA1G and TIMP3 were significantly different between squamous and adenocarcinomas. Methylation of RUNX3, SCGB3A1, SFRP4, and DLC1 was significantly associated with the extent of the disease when comparing localized versus metastatic tumors. Moreover, methylation of HTLF, SFRP5 and TIMP3 were significantly associated with overall survival.ConclusionsMS-MLPA can be used for classification of certain types of lung tumors and clinical outcome prediction. This latter is clinically relevant by offering an adjunct strategy for the clinical management of lung cancer patients.

Highlights

  • Changes in DNA methylation of crucial cancer genes including tumor suppressors can occur early in carcinogenesis, being potentially important early indicators of cancer

  • Lung cancer cell lines Six Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cell lines consisting of three adenocarcinoma cell lines (A549, H522 and H358), two large carcinoma cell lines (H460, H661), and one squamous cell carcinoma cell line (H226), as well as one small cell lung cancer cell line (SCLC) (H841) were obtained from the American Type Culture Collection (Rockville, MD, US), grown in RPMI-1640 medium (Sigma) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum, and collected under standard tissue culture protocols

  • Methylation specific multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MS-MLPA) profiles of lung cancer cell lines The methylation profiles of the 18 genes under study were initially tested in seven cell lines derived from lung tumors of different histopathologic variants

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Summary

Introduction

Changes in DNA methylation of crucial cancer genes including tumor suppressors can occur early in carcinogenesis, being potentially important early indicators of cancer. The objective of this study was to examine a multiplexed approach to assess the methylation of tumor suppressor genes as tumor stratification and clinical outcome prognostic biomarkers for lung cancer. Lung cancer is the third most frequent tumor, representing the leading cause of cancer death [1]. Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is the most common variant. NSCLC is the superseding term for various types of lung cancer such as the most common ones, adenocarcinomas and squamous carcinomas [2,3,4]. Understanding the molecular basis of lung cancer will enable the identification of high-risk populations for effective early detection, and prognostic and predictive markers of tumor behaviour

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