Aberrant promoter methylation and silencing of the RASSF1A gene in pediatric tumors and cell lines
0301 basic medicine
Gene Expression Profiling
Tumor Suppressor Proteins
Infant
DNA, Neoplasm
DNA Methylation
Polymerase Chain Reaction
Neoplasm Proteins
Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic
03 medical and health sciences
Cell Transformation, Neoplastic
Child, Preschool
Neoplasms
Tumor Cells, Cultured
Humans
Genes, Tumor Suppressor
Chromosomes, Human, Pair 3
Gene Silencing
Child
Promoter Regions, Genetic
Alleles
DOI:
10.1038/sj.onc.1205446
Publication Date:
2002-09-04T20:05:44Z
AUTHORS (11)
ABSTRACT
Aberrant promoter methylation of tumor suppressor genes has not been fully investigated in pediatric tumors. Therefore, we examined the methylation status of nine genes (p16(INK4A), MGMT, GSTP1, RASSF1A, APC, DAPK, RARbeta, CDH1 and CDH13) in 175 primary pediatric tumors and 23 tumor cell lines using methylation-specific PCR. We studied the major forms of pediatric tumors--Wilms' tumor, neuroblastoma, hepatoblastoma, medulloblastoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, osteosarcoma, Ewing's sarcoma, retinoblastoma and acute leukemia. The most frequently methylated gene in both primary tumors and cell lines was RASSF1A (40, 86%, respectively). However, the rates of RASSF1A methylation in individual tumor types varied from 0 to 88%. RASSF1A methylation was tumor specific and was absent in adjacent non-malignant tissues. Methylation of the other genes was relatively rare in tumors and non-malignant tissues (less than 5%). Neuroblastoma patients with methylation of RASSF1A were significantly older than patients without methylation (P=0.008). There was no relationship between methylation status and other clinico-pathologic parameters. We treated six cell lines lacking RASSF1A mRNA with 5-aza-2'deoxycytidine to examine the relationship between methylation and transcriptional silencing. In five of six cell lines, restoration of RASSF1A mRNA was confirmed by RT-PCR. Our findings indicate that aberrant promoter methylation of RASSF1A may contribute to the pathogenesis of many different forms of pediatric tumors.
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