Abstract

There is substantial evidence to suggest that aberrant DNA methylation in the regulatory regions of expressed genes may play a role in hematologic malignancy. In the current report, the Restriction Landmark Genomic Scanning (RLGS) method was used to detect aberrant DNA methylation (M) in acute myeloid leukemia (AML). RLGS-M profiles were initially performed using DNA from diagnostic, remission, and relapse samples from a patient with AML. Rp18, one of the eight spots found that was absent in the relapse sample, was cloned. Sequence analysis showed that the spot represented a portion of the WIT-1 gene on human chromosome 11p13. Rp18 was missing in the relapse sample due to a distinct DNA methylation pattern of the WIT-1 gene. Twenty-seven AML patients that entered CR after therapy (i.e., chemosensitive) were studied and only 10 (37%) of the diagnostic bone marrow (BM) samples showed methylation of WIT-1. However, seven of eight (87.5%) diagnostic BM samples from primary refractory AML (chemosensitive) showed methylation of WIT-1. The incidence of WIT-1 methylation in primary refractory AML was significantly higher than that noted in chemosensitive AML (P=0.018). Together, these results indicate that RLGS-M can be used to find novel epigenetic alterations in human cancer that are undetectable by standard methods. In addition, these results underline the potential importance of WIT-1 methylation in chemoresistant AML.

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