Aberrant CpG island methylation in acute myeloid leukemia is accentuated at relapse

Author:

Kroeger Heike1,Jelinek Jaroslav1,Estécio Marcos R. H.1,He Rong1,Kondo Kimie1,Chung Woonbok1,Zhang Li2,Shen Lanlan1,Kantarjian Hagop M.1,Bueso-Ramos Carlos E.3,Issa Jean-Pierre J.1

Affiliation:

1. Departments ofLeukemia,

2. Bioinformatics and Computational Biology, and

3. Hematopathology, University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston

Abstract

AbstractDNA methylation of CpG islands around gene transcription start sites results in gene silencing and plays a role in leukemia pathophysiology. Its impact in leukemia progression is not fully understood. We performed genomewide screening for methylated CpG islands and identified 8 genes frequently methylated in leukemia cell lines and in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML): NOR1, CDH13, p15, NPM2, OLIG2, PGR, HIN1, and SLC26A4. We assessed the methylation status of these genes and of the repetitive element LINE-1 in 30 patients with AML, both at diagnosis and relapse. Abnormal methylation was found in 23% to 83% of patients at diagnosis and in 47% to 93% at relapse, with CDH13 being the most frequently methylated. We observed concordance in methylation of several genes, confirming the presence of a hypermethylator pathway in AML. DNA methylation levels increased at relapse in 25 of 30 (83%) patients with AML. These changes represent much larger epigenetic dysregulation, since methylation microarray analysis of 9008 autosomal genes in 4 patients showed hypermethylation ranging from 5.9% to 13.6% (median 8.3%) genes at diagnosis and 8.0% to 15.2% (median 10.6%) genes in relapse (P < .001). Our data suggest that DNA methylation is involved in AML progression and provide a rationale for the use of epigenetic agents in remission maintenance.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

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