Roadmap of DNA methylation in breast cancer identifies novel prognostic biomarkers

Abstract Background Breast cancer is a highly heterogeneous disease resulting in diverse clinical behaviours and therapeutic responses. DNA methylation is a major epigenetic alteration that is commonly perturbed in cancers. The aim of this study is to characterize the relationship between DNA methyl...

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Main Authors: Bernardo P. de Almeida, Joana Dias Apolónio, Alexandra Binnie, Pedro Castelo-Branco
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-03-01
Series:BMC Cancer
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12885-019-5403-0
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spelling doaj-6d7c6ff5c1a247ad943f44f4ccef70032020-11-25T02:57:58ZengBMCBMC Cancer1471-24072019-03-0119111210.1186/s12885-019-5403-0Roadmap of DNA methylation in breast cancer identifies novel prognostic biomarkersBernardo P. de Almeida0Joana Dias Apolónio1Alexandra Binnie2Pedro Castelo-Branco3Institute of Molecular Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of LisbonDepartment of Biomedical Sciences and Medicine, University of AlgarveDepartment of Biomedical Sciences and Medicine, University of AlgarveDepartment of Biomedical Sciences and Medicine, University of AlgarveAbstract Background Breast cancer is a highly heterogeneous disease resulting in diverse clinical behaviours and therapeutic responses. DNA methylation is a major epigenetic alteration that is commonly perturbed in cancers. The aim of this study is to characterize the relationship between DNA methylation and aberrant gene expression in breast cancer. Methods We analysed DNA methylation and gene expression profiles from breast cancer tissue and matched normal tissue in The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA). Genome-wide differential methylation analysis and methylation-gene expression correlation was performed. Gene expression changes were subsequently validated in the METABRIC dataset. The Oncoscore tool was used to identify genes that had previously been associated with cancer in the literature. A subset of genes that had not previously been studied in cancer was chosen for further analysis. Results We identified 368 CpGs that were differentially methylated between tumor and normal breast tissue (∆β > 0.4). Hypermethylated CpGs were overrepresented in tumor tissue and were found predominantly (56%) in upstream promoter regions. Conversely, hypomethylated CpG sites were found primarily in the gene body (66%). Expression analysis revealed that 209 of the differentially-methylated CpGs were located in 169 genes that were differently expressed between normal and breast tumor tissue. Methylation-expression correlations were predominantly negative (70%) for promoter CpG sites and positive (74%) for gene body CpG sites. Among these differentially-methylated and differentially-expressed genes, we identified 7 that had not previously been studied in any form of cancer. Three of these, TDRD10, PRAC2 and TMEM132C, contained CpG sites that showed diagnostic and prognostic value in breast cancer, particularly in estrogen-receptor (ER)-positive samples. A pan-cancer analysis confirmed differential expression of these genes together with diagnostic and prognostic value of their respective CpG sites in multiple cancer types. Conclusion We have identified 368 DNA methylation changes that characterize breast cancer tumor tissue, of which 209 are associated with genes that are differentially-expressed in the same samples. Novel DNA methylation markers were identified, of which cg12374721 (PRAC2), cg18081940 (TDRD10) and cg04475027 (TMEM132C) show promise as diagnostic and prognostic markers in breast cancer as well as other cancer types.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12885-019-5403-0Breast cancerDNA methylationBiomarkersDiagnosticPrognostic
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bernardo P. de Almeida
Joana Dias Apolónio
Alexandra Binnie
Pedro Castelo-Branco
spellingShingle Bernardo P. de Almeida
Joana Dias Apolónio
Alexandra Binnie
Pedro Castelo-Branco
Roadmap of DNA methylation in breast cancer identifies novel prognostic biomarkers
BMC Cancer
Breast cancer
DNA methylation
Biomarkers
Diagnostic
Prognostic
author_facet Bernardo P. de Almeida
Joana Dias Apolónio
Alexandra Binnie
Pedro Castelo-Branco
author_sort Bernardo P. de Almeida
title Roadmap of DNA methylation in breast cancer identifies novel prognostic biomarkers
title_short Roadmap of DNA methylation in breast cancer identifies novel prognostic biomarkers
title_full Roadmap of DNA methylation in breast cancer identifies novel prognostic biomarkers
title_fullStr Roadmap of DNA methylation in breast cancer identifies novel prognostic biomarkers
title_full_unstemmed Roadmap of DNA methylation in breast cancer identifies novel prognostic biomarkers
title_sort roadmap of dna methylation in breast cancer identifies novel prognostic biomarkers
publisher BMC
series BMC Cancer
issn 1471-2407
publishDate 2019-03-01
description Abstract Background Breast cancer is a highly heterogeneous disease resulting in diverse clinical behaviours and therapeutic responses. DNA methylation is a major epigenetic alteration that is commonly perturbed in cancers. The aim of this study is to characterize the relationship between DNA methylation and aberrant gene expression in breast cancer. Methods We analysed DNA methylation and gene expression profiles from breast cancer tissue and matched normal tissue in The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA). Genome-wide differential methylation analysis and methylation-gene expression correlation was performed. Gene expression changes were subsequently validated in the METABRIC dataset. The Oncoscore tool was used to identify genes that had previously been associated with cancer in the literature. A subset of genes that had not previously been studied in cancer was chosen for further analysis. Results We identified 368 CpGs that were differentially methylated between tumor and normal breast tissue (∆β > 0.4). Hypermethylated CpGs were overrepresented in tumor tissue and were found predominantly (56%) in upstream promoter regions. Conversely, hypomethylated CpG sites were found primarily in the gene body (66%). Expression analysis revealed that 209 of the differentially-methylated CpGs were located in 169 genes that were differently expressed between normal and breast tumor tissue. Methylation-expression correlations were predominantly negative (70%) for promoter CpG sites and positive (74%) for gene body CpG sites. Among these differentially-methylated and differentially-expressed genes, we identified 7 that had not previously been studied in any form of cancer. Three of these, TDRD10, PRAC2 and TMEM132C, contained CpG sites that showed diagnostic and prognostic value in breast cancer, particularly in estrogen-receptor (ER)-positive samples. A pan-cancer analysis confirmed differential expression of these genes together with diagnostic and prognostic value of their respective CpG sites in multiple cancer types. Conclusion We have identified 368 DNA methylation changes that characterize breast cancer tumor tissue, of which 209 are associated with genes that are differentially-expressed in the same samples. Novel DNA methylation markers were identified, of which cg12374721 (PRAC2), cg18081940 (TDRD10) and cg04475027 (TMEM132C) show promise as diagnostic and prognostic markers in breast cancer as well as other cancer types.
topic Breast cancer
DNA methylation
Biomarkers
Diagnostic
Prognostic
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12885-019-5403-0
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