Breast cancer methylomes establish an epigenomic foundation for metastasis Journal Article


Authors: Fang, F.; Turcan, S.; Rimner, A.; Kaufman, A.; Giri, D.; Morris, L. G. T.; Shen, R.; Seshan, V.; Mo, Q.; Heguy, A.; Baylin, S. B.; Ahuja, N.; Viale, A.; Massague, J.; Norton, L.; Vahdat, L. T.; Moynahan, M. E.; Chan, T. A.
Article Title: Breast cancer methylomes establish an epigenomic foundation for metastasis
Abstract: Cancer-specific alterations in DNA methylation are hallmarks of human malignancies; however, the nature of the breast cancer epigenome and its effects on metastatic behavior remain obscure. To address this issue, we used genome-wide analysis to characterize the methylomes of breast cancers with diverse metastatic behavior. Groups of breast tumors were characterized by the presence or absence of coordinate hypermethylation at a large number of genes, demonstrating a breast CpG island methylator phenotype (B-CIMP). The B-CIMP provided a distinct epigenomic profile and was a strong determinant of metastatic potential. Specifically, the presence of the B-CIMP in tumors was associated with low metastatic risk and survival, and the absence of the B-CIMP was associated with high metastatic risk and death. B-CIMP loci were highly enriched for genes that make up the metastasis transcriptome. Methylation at B-CIMP genes accounted for much of the transcriptomal diversity between breast cancers of varying prognosis, indicating a fundamental epigenomic contribution to metastasis. Comparison of the loci affected by the B-CIMP with those affected by the hypermethylator phenotype in glioma and colon cancer revealed that the CIMP signature was shared by multiple human malignancies. Our data provide a unifying epigenomic framework linking breast cancers with varying outcome and transcriptomic changes underlying metastasis. These findings significantly enhance our understanding of breast cancer oncogenesis and aid the development of new prognostic biomarkers for this common malignancy.
Keywords: cancer survival; controlled study; human tissue; glioma; phenotype; metastasis; breast cancer; gene expression profiling; epidermal growth factor receptor 2; gene locus; genetic variability; genetic transcription; transcriptomics; dna methylation; prediction; cancer mortality; genome analysis; epigenetics; cpg island; colon cancer; genome; metastasis potential; cancer tissue; estrogen receptor; progesterone receptor; breast carcinogenesis; genomic dna; breast cpg island methylator phenotype; methylome
Journal Title: Science Translational Medicine
Volume: 3
Issue: 75
ISSN: 1946-6234
Publisher: American Association for the Advancement of Science  
Date Published: 2011-03-23
Start Page: 75ra25
Language: English
DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.3001875
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC3146366
PUBMED: 21430268
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Export Date: 23 June 2011" - "Art. No.: 75ra25" - "Source: Scopus"
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MSK Authors
  1. Venkatraman Ennapadam Seshan
    382 Seshan
  2. Qianxing Mo
    37 Mo
  3. Adriana Heguy
    88 Heguy
  4. Timothy Chan
    317 Chan
  5. Mary Ellen Moynahan
    105 Moynahan
  6. Larry Norton
    758 Norton
  7. Dilip D Giri
    184 Giri
  8. Ronglai Shen
    204 Shen
  9. Luc Morris
    278 Morris
  10. Andreas Rimner
    524 Rimner
  11. Joan Massague
    388 Massague
  12. Agnes Viale
    245 Viale
  13. Fang Fang
    6 Fang
  14. Sevin Turcan
    25 Turcan