Aberrant promoter methylation of multiple genes during pathogenesis of bladder cancer Journal Article


Authors: Brait, M.; Begum, S.; Carvalho, A. L.; Dasgupta, S.; Vettore, A. L.; Czerniak, B.; Caballero, O. L.; Westra, W. H.; Sidransky, D.; Hoque, M. O.
Article Title: Aberrant promoter methylation of multiple genes during pathogenesis of bladder cancer
Abstract: Purpose: The aims of our study were to elucidate the role of methylation of a large panel of genes during multistage pathogenesis of bladder cancer and to correlate our findings with patient age and other clinicopathologic features. Experimental Design: We studied the methylation status of 21 genes by quantitative methylation-specific PCR in an evaluation set of 25 tumor and 5 normal samples. Based on methylation frequency in tumors and normals in gene evaluation set, we selected 7 candidate genes and tested an independent set of 93 tumors and 26 normals. The presence or absence of methylation was evaluated for an association with cancer using cross-tabulations and χ2 or Fisher's exact tests as appropriate. All statistical tests were two-sided. Results: Most primary tumors (89 of 93, 96%) had methylation of one or more genes of independent set; 53 (57%) CCNA1, 29 (31%) MINT1, 36 (39%) CRBP, 53 (57%) CCND2, 66 (71%) PGP9.5, 60 (65%) CALCA, and 78 (84%) AIM1. Normal uroepithelium samples from 26 controls revealed no methylation of the CCNA1 and MINT1 genes, whereas methylation of CRBP, CCND2, PGP9.5, and CALCA was detected at low levels. All the 7 genes in independent set were tightly correlated with each other and 3 of these genes showed increased methylation frequencies in bladder cancer with increasing age. PGP9.5 and AIM1 methylation correlated with primary tumor invasion. Conclusion: Our results indicate that the methylation profile of novel genes in bladder cancers correlates with clinicopathologic features of poor prognosis and is an age-related phenomenon. Copyright © 2008 American Association for Cancer Research.
Keywords: adult; controlled study; human tissue; aged; middle aged; major clinical study; promoter region; clinical feature; cancer patient; polymerase chain reaction; proportional hazards models; tumor markers, biological; gene function; bladder cancer; dna methylation; urinary bladder neoplasms; cancer invasion; chi-square distribution; age distribution; tumor gene; analysis of variance; bladder carcinogenesis; aim1 gene; calca gene; ccna1 gene; ccnd2 gene; crbp gene; mint1 gene; pgp9 5 gene
Journal Title: Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers and Prevention
Volume: 17
Issue: 10
ISSN: 1055-9965
Publisher: American Association for Cancer Research  
Date Published: 2008-10-01
Start Page: 2786
End Page: 2794
Language: English
DOI: 10.1158/1055-9965.epi-08-0192
PUBMED: 18843024
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC2778751
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Cited By (since 1996): 18" - "Export Date: 17 November 2011" - "CODEN: CEBPE" - "Source: Scopus"
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