DNA methylation profiling revealed promoter hypermethylation-induced silencing of p16, DDAH2 and DUSP1 in primary oral squamous cell carcinoma

Background: Hypermethylation in promoter regions of genes might lead to altered gene functions and result in malignant cellular transformation. Thus, biomarker identification for hypermethylated genes would be very useful for early diagnosis, prognosis, and therapeutic treatment of oral squamous cel...

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Published in:International Journal of Medical Sciences
Main Author: Khor G.H.; Froemming G.R.A.; Zain R.B.; Thomas Abraham M.; Omar E.; Tan S.K.; Tan A.C.; Vincent-Chong V.K.; Thong K.L.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2013
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84885896729&doi=10.7150%2fijms.6884&partnerID=40&md5=4f6361095ea471369cba4590d8d2b28b
id 2-s2.0-84885896729
spelling 2-s2.0-84885896729
Khor G.H.; Froemming G.R.A.; Zain R.B.; Thomas Abraham M.; Omar E.; Tan S.K.; Tan A.C.; Vincent-Chong V.K.; Thong K.L.
DNA methylation profiling revealed promoter hypermethylation-induced silencing of p16, DDAH2 and DUSP1 in primary oral squamous cell carcinoma
2013
International Journal of Medical Sciences
10
12
10.7150/ijms.6884
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84885896729&doi=10.7150%2fijms.6884&partnerID=40&md5=4f6361095ea471369cba4590d8d2b28b
Background: Hypermethylation in promoter regions of genes might lead to altered gene functions and result in malignant cellular transformation. Thus, biomarker identification for hypermethylated genes would be very useful for early diagnosis, prognosis, and therapeutic treatment of oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC). The objectives of this study were to screen and validate differentially hypermethylated genes in OSCC and correlate the hypermethylation-induced genes with demographic, clinocopathological characteristics and survival rate of OSCC. Methods: DNA methylation profiling was utilized to screen the differentially hypermethylated genes in OSCC. Three selected differentially-hypermethylated genes of p16, DDAH2 and DUSP1 were further validated for methylation status and protein expression. The correlation between demographic, clinicopathological characteristics, and survival rate of OSCC patients with hypermethylation of p16, DDAH2 and DUSP1 genes were analysed in the study. Results: Methylation profiling demonstrated 33 promoter hypermethylated genes in OSCC. The differentially-hypermethylated genes of p16, DDAH2 and DUSP1 revealed positivity of 78%, 80% and 88% in methylation-specific polymerase chain reaction and 24% and 22% of immunoreactivity in DDAH2 and DUSP1 genes, respectively. Promoter hypermethylation of p16 gene was found significantly associated with tumour site of buccal, gum, tongue and lip (P=0.001). In addition, DDAH2 methylation level was correlated significantly with patients' age (P=0.050). In this study, overall five-year survival rate was 38.1% for OSCC patients and was influenced by sex difference. Conclusions: The study has identified 33 promoter hypermethylated genes that were significantly silenced in OSCC, which might be involved in an important mechanism in oral carcinogenesis. Our approaches revealed signature candidates of differentially hypermethylated genes of DDAH2 and DUSP1 which can be further developed as potential biomarkers for OSCC as diagnostic, prognostic and therapeutic targets in the future. © Ivyspring International Publisher.

14491907
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Khor G.H.; Froemming G.R.A.; Zain R.B.; Thomas Abraham M.; Omar E.; Tan S.K.; Tan A.C.; Vincent-Chong V.K.; Thong K.L.
spellingShingle Khor G.H.; Froemming G.R.A.; Zain R.B.; Thomas Abraham M.; Omar E.; Tan S.K.; Tan A.C.; Vincent-Chong V.K.; Thong K.L.
DNA methylation profiling revealed promoter hypermethylation-induced silencing of p16, DDAH2 and DUSP1 in primary oral squamous cell carcinoma
author_facet Khor G.H.; Froemming G.R.A.; Zain R.B.; Thomas Abraham M.; Omar E.; Tan S.K.; Tan A.C.; Vincent-Chong V.K.; Thong K.L.
author_sort Khor G.H.; Froemming G.R.A.; Zain R.B.; Thomas Abraham M.; Omar E.; Tan S.K.; Tan A.C.; Vincent-Chong V.K.; Thong K.L.
title DNA methylation profiling revealed promoter hypermethylation-induced silencing of p16, DDAH2 and DUSP1 in primary oral squamous cell carcinoma
title_short DNA methylation profiling revealed promoter hypermethylation-induced silencing of p16, DDAH2 and DUSP1 in primary oral squamous cell carcinoma
title_full DNA methylation profiling revealed promoter hypermethylation-induced silencing of p16, DDAH2 and DUSP1 in primary oral squamous cell carcinoma
title_fullStr DNA methylation profiling revealed promoter hypermethylation-induced silencing of p16, DDAH2 and DUSP1 in primary oral squamous cell carcinoma
title_full_unstemmed DNA methylation profiling revealed promoter hypermethylation-induced silencing of p16, DDAH2 and DUSP1 in primary oral squamous cell carcinoma
title_sort DNA methylation profiling revealed promoter hypermethylation-induced silencing of p16, DDAH2 and DUSP1 in primary oral squamous cell carcinoma
publishDate 2013
container_title International Journal of Medical Sciences
container_volume 10
container_issue 12
doi_str_mv 10.7150/ijms.6884
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84885896729&doi=10.7150%2fijms.6884&partnerID=40&md5=4f6361095ea471369cba4590d8d2b28b
description Background: Hypermethylation in promoter regions of genes might lead to altered gene functions and result in malignant cellular transformation. Thus, biomarker identification for hypermethylated genes would be very useful for early diagnosis, prognosis, and therapeutic treatment of oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC). The objectives of this study were to screen and validate differentially hypermethylated genes in OSCC and correlate the hypermethylation-induced genes with demographic, clinocopathological characteristics and survival rate of OSCC. Methods: DNA methylation profiling was utilized to screen the differentially hypermethylated genes in OSCC. Three selected differentially-hypermethylated genes of p16, DDAH2 and DUSP1 were further validated for methylation status and protein expression. The correlation between demographic, clinicopathological characteristics, and survival rate of OSCC patients with hypermethylation of p16, DDAH2 and DUSP1 genes were analysed in the study. Results: Methylation profiling demonstrated 33 promoter hypermethylated genes in OSCC. The differentially-hypermethylated genes of p16, DDAH2 and DUSP1 revealed positivity of 78%, 80% and 88% in methylation-specific polymerase chain reaction and 24% and 22% of immunoreactivity in DDAH2 and DUSP1 genes, respectively. Promoter hypermethylation of p16 gene was found significantly associated with tumour site of buccal, gum, tongue and lip (P=0.001). In addition, DDAH2 methylation level was correlated significantly with patients' age (P=0.050). In this study, overall five-year survival rate was 38.1% for OSCC patients and was influenced by sex difference. Conclusions: The study has identified 33 promoter hypermethylated genes that were significantly silenced in OSCC, which might be involved in an important mechanism in oral carcinogenesis. Our approaches revealed signature candidates of differentially hypermethylated genes of DDAH2 and DUSP1 which can be further developed as potential biomarkers for OSCC as diagnostic, prognostic and therapeutic targets in the future. © Ivyspring International Publisher.
publisher
issn 14491907
language English
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accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
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