Abstract

BackgroundAlterations in histone modifications are now well known to result in epigenetic heterogeneity in tumor tissues; however, their prognostic value and association with resection margins still remain poorly understood and controversial. Further, histopathologically negative resection margins in several cancers have been associated with better prognosis of the disease. However, in gastric cancer, despite a high rate of R0 resection, a considerably high incidence of loco-regional recurrence is observed. We believe alterations of global histone post-translational modifications could help in identifying molecular signatures for defining the true negative surgical resection margins and also the prognosis of gastric cancer patients.ResultsThe present study compares the level of H3S10ph among paired tumor and histopathologically confirmed disease-free (R0) proximal and distal surgical resection margin (PRM and DRM) tissue samples of GC patients (n = 101). Immunoblotting and immune-histochemical analysis showed a significantly (p < 0.01) higher level of H3S10ph in tumor compared to R0 surgical resection margins. Along with tumor, high H3S10ph levels in both PRM and DRM correlated with clinical parameters and poor survival. Interestingly, in the case of PRM and DRM, the association of H3S10ph with poor survival was only found in a patient group with the resection margin distance <4 cm. Further investigations revealed that the increase of H3S10ph in tumor tissues is not due to the change in cell cycle profile but rather an interphase-associated phenomenon. Moreover, an increase in ph-MSK1 and ph-p38 levels in tumor tissues and the decrease in ph-MSK1 and H3S10ph on p38 inhibition in gastric cancer cells confirmed p38-MAPK/MSK1 pathway-mediated regulation of H3S10ph in gastric cancer.ConclusionsOur study provides the first evidence that p38-MAPK/MSK1-regulated increase of H3S10ph in GC is predictive of a more aggressive cancer phenotype and could help in defining true negative surgical resection margin. Importantly, our data also gave a new rationale for exploration of the use of MSK1 inhibitor in gastric cancer therapy and the combination of histone post-translational modifications, H4K16ac and H4K20me3 along with H3S10ph as epigenetic prognostic markers.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13148-016-0255-9) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Alterations in histone modifications are well known to result in epigenetic heterogeneity in tumor tissues; their prognostic value and association with resection margins still remain poorly understood and controversial

  • Our results demonstrate a distance-dependent (≤4 vs >4 cm) relation of Histone H3 serine phosphorylation (H3S10ph) of the tumor with both Proximal surgical resection margin (PRM) and Distal surgical resection margin (DRM) and it correlates with the prognosis of Gastric cancer (GC) patients

  • The status of H3S10ph was further studied in a validation set (n = 101) among tumor and histopathologically negative PRM and DRM tissues using IHC

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Summary

Introduction

Alterations in histone modifications are well known to result in epigenetic heterogeneity in tumor tissues; their prognostic value and association with resection margins still remain poorly understood and controversial. Histopathologically negative resection margins in several cancers have been associated with better prognosis of the disease. In gastric cancer, despite a high rate of R0 resection, a considerably high incidence of loco-regional recurrence is observed. We believe alterations of global histone post-translational modifications could help in identifying molecular signatures for defining the true negative surgical resection margins and the prognosis of gastric cancer patients. In India, it is one of the most aggressive cancers ranking third and second in terms of incidence and mortality, respectively [2]. There is an urgent need to identify molecular markers and investigate their expression in the cancerous tissues and the surrounding resected (margin) tissue that is apparently free from disease (R0) based on histopathology

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