Impact of DLK1-DIO3 imprinted cluster hypomethylation in smoker patients with lung cancer.

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2016-07-15

Authors

Molina-Pinelo, Sonia
Salinas, Ana
Moreno-Mata, Nicolás
Ferrer, Irene
Suarez, Rocío
Andrés-León, Eduardo
Rodríguez-Paredes, Manuel
Gutekunst, Julian
Jantus-Lewintre, Eloisa
Camps, Carlos

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Metrics
Google Scholar
Export

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

DNA methylation is important for gene expression and genome stability, and its disruption is thought to play a key role in the initiation and progression of cancer and other diseases. The DLK1-DIO3 cluster has been shown to be imprinted in humans, and some of its components are relevant to diverse pathological processes. The purpose of this study was to assess the methylation patterns of the DLK1-DIO3 cluster in patients with lung cancer to study its relevance in the pathogenesis of this disease. We found a characteristic methylation pattern of this cluster in smoking associated lung cancer, as compared to normal lung tissue. This methylation profile is not patent however in lung cancer of never smokers nor in lung tissue of COPD patients. We found 3 deregulated protein-coding genes at this locus: one was hypermethylated (DIO3) and two were hypomethylated (DLK1 and RTL1). Statistically significant differences were also detected in two different families of SNORDs, two miRNA clusters and four lncRNAs (MEG3, MEG8, MEG9 and LINC00524). These findings were validated using data from the cancer genome atlas (TCGA) database. We have then showed an inverse correlation between DNA methylation and expression levels in 5 randomly selected genes. Several targets of miRNAs included in the DLK1-DIO3 cluster have been experimentally verified as tumor suppressors. All of these results suggest that the dysmethylation of the imprinted DLK1-DIO3 cluster could have a relevant role in the pathogenesis of lung cancer in current and former smokers and may be used for diagnostic and/or therapeutic purposes.

Description

MeSH Terms

DeCS Terms

CIE Terms

Keywords

COPD, DLK1-DIO3 cluster, epigenetic, lung cancer, transcriptional regulation

Citation