A recent article by Watanabe et al (2004) described aberrant methylation of the suppressor of cytokine signalling (SOCS)-1 gene in 72% of primary acute myeloid leukaemia samples, and 52% of leukaemia cell lines. In their experiment, they employed methylation specific polymerase chain reaction (MSP) with a pair of primers flanking the CpG islands inside exon 2 of SOCS1. SOCS1 has two exons, an untranslated exon 1 and a translated exon 2. CpG islands exist both in the untranslated region (UTR) 5′ to, as well as inside the coding region of, exon 2 (Fig 1). Aberrant methylation of CpG islands in these two regions and its relationship to SOCS1 suppression have been studied (Yoshikawa et al, 2001; Chen et al, 2003; Fukushima et al, 2003; Galm et al, 2003; Liu et al, 2003; Nagai et al, 2003; Chim et al, 2004; Watanabe et al, 2004) (Fig 1). Initial reports investigated the CpG islands within exon 2. Later reports, however, focussed on CpG islands in the 5′UTR. We have recently shown that MSP with primers located in exon 2, as described by Watanabe et al (2004), detected methylation in five of 12 normal peripheral blood and two of three normal marrow samples (Chim et al, 2004). These results were confirmed by sequencing, suggesting that methylation within SOSC1 exon 2 might not be necessarily involved in regulation of gene transcription. The lack of impact of SOSC1 exon 2 methylation on gene expression was also shown by Watanabe et al (2004). In the two cell lines HL60 and U937, where complete methylation of CpG islands within SOCS1 exon 2 was present, there was still a substantial expression of SOCS1 (Fig 1, Watanabe et al, 2004), thus showing an incomplete correlation between methylation and gene silencing. In fact, methylation in CpG islands within exons are not uncommon and may occur in normal tissues, and is not associated with gene suppression. For instance, in a study involving the HIC1 gene, CpG island methylation inside exon 3 was present in both leukaemia samples and normal controls, and this was not associated with down regulation of HIC1 in normal samples. Schematic diagram of the SOCS1 gene and the positions of primers for methylation specific polymerase chain reaction (MSP). Primers are represented by arrows. Figure not drawn to scale. The frequencies of SOCS1 methylation in different malignancies as detected by different MSP primers are also shown. *Position of primers; MSP, methylation specific polymerase chain reaction; ANT, adjacent non-tumourous tissue; PB, peripheral blood; BM, bone marrow; NS, not specified; 5-AC, 5-azacytadine; UTR, untranslated region; CL, cell lines; PS, primary samples, ND, not done. On the other hand, we showed that with MSP using primers in the 5′UTR, no methylation was demonstrable in normal tissues. Using these primers, we were also unable to show aberrant SOSC1 methylation in any of the myeloma samples that we tested (Chim et al, 2004), nor in any of the leukaemia samples in another study. Therefore, the role of SOCS1 methylation in leukemogenesis must be considered with caution, particularly when results were obtained by investigating exon 2 CpG island methylation. To fully address this problem, SOCS1 exon 2 methylation should be confirmed by concomitant examination of methylation in the 5′UTR. This is because a methylation boundary might exist, which marks methylated and unmethylated regions in DNA of normal cells. If the SOCS1 exon 2 methylation was not restricted to neoplastic cells and occurred in normal cells, a methylation boundary between exon 2 and the 5′UTR might be observed, with the 5′UTR unmethylated. Secondly, methylation-induced silencing of SOCS1 is potentially associated with constitutive activation of Janus kinaseSTAT (signal transducers and activators of transcription) signalling, and thus elevation of phosphorylated STAT (pSTAT) levels. Therefore, SOCS1 down-regulation would be expected to give rise to inappropriate activation of pSTAT, whereas SOCS1 re-expression after gene demethylation would give rise to suppressed pSTAT activation. The investigations of these signalling pathways would address whether SOCS1 exon 2 methylation is biologically important.