Hypomethylation of Alu repetitive elements in esophageal mucosa, and its potential contribution to the epigenetic field for cancerization

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Abstract

Background: Aberrant hypermethylation of specific genes is present in esophageal squamous cell carcinomas (ESCCs). Such hypermethylation is also present in normal-appearing esophageal mucosae of ESCC patients and is considered to contribute to the formation of a field for cancerization. On the other hand, the presence of global hypomethylation in ESCCs or in their background esophageal mucosae is unknown. Method: We collected 184 samples of esophageal mucosae (95 normal mucosae from healthy subjects, and 89 non-cancerous background mucosae from ESCC patients) and 93 samples of ESCCs. Methylation levels of repetitive elements (Alu, LINE1) and cancer/testis antigen genes (NY-ESO-1, MAGE-C1) were measured by bisulfite pyrosequencing and quantitative methylation-specific PCR, respectively. Results: Methylation levels of Alu, LINE1, NY-ESO-1, and MAGE-C1 were significantly lower in ESCCs than in their background and normal mucosae. Also, in the background mucosae, a significant decrease of the Alu methylation level compared with the normal mucosae was present. In ESCCs, methylation levels of the two repetitive elements and the two cancer/testis antigen genes were correlated with each other. Conclusion: This is the first study to show the presence of global hypomethylation in ESCCs, and even in their non-cancerous background mucosae. Alu hypomethylation might reflect the severity of an epigenetic field for cancerization. © 2012 Springer Science+Business Media B.V.

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Matsuda, Y., Yamashita, S., Lee, Y. C., Niwa, T., Yoshida, T., Gyobu, K., … Ushijima, T. (2012). Hypomethylation of Alu repetitive elements in esophageal mucosa, and its potential contribution to the epigenetic field for cancerization. Cancer Causes and Control, 23(6), 865–873. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10552-012-9955-4

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