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e-Article

E-Cadherin gene promoter hypermethylation in primary human gastric carcinomas.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
JNCI: Journal of the National Cancer Institute. 04/05/2000, Vol. 92 Issue 7, p569-573. 5p. 3 Diagrams, 1 Chart.
Subject
*STOMACH tumors
*METHYLATION
*BIOCHEMISTRY
*CANCER
*COMPARATIVE studies
*DNA
*DNA probes
*GENES
*GENETIC polymorphisms
*GLYCOPROTEINS
*GLYCOSIDES
*HETEROCYCLIC compounds
*PHENOMENOLOGY
*RESEARCH methodology
*MEDICAL cooperation
*NUCLEOSIDES
*POLYMERASE chain reaction
*RESEARCH
*WESTERN immunoblotting
*EVALUATION research
*SEQUENCE analysis
Language
ISSN
0027-8874
Abstract
Background: E (epithelial)-cadherin, the cell adhesion molecule also considered a potential invasion/metastasis suppressor, is mutationally inactivated in nearly half of all undifferentiated-scattered (diffuse-type) gastric carcinomas. In addition, silencing of E-cadherin by CpG methylation within its promoter region has been reported in several gastric carcinoma cell lines. We investigated the methylation status of the E-cadherin promoter region in 53 primary human gastric carcinomas.Methods: Hypermethylation of the E-cadherin promoter was determined by utilizing methylation-specific polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-single-strand conformation polymorphism (MSP-SSCP) analysis followed by direct sequencing of PCR products. Expression of E-cadherin was studied by western blot analysis. All statistical tests were two-sided.Results: Hypermethylation of the E-cadherin promoter was evident in 27 (51%) of 53 primary gastric carcinomas examined by MSP-SSCP. It occurred more frequently in carcinomas of the undifferentiated-scattered type (in 15 [83%] of 18) than in other histologic subtypes (in 12 [34%] of 35) (P =.0011, Fisher's exact test), and it was present at similar rates in early (in six [60%] of 10) versus advanced (in 21 [49%] of 43) carcinomas (P =.73, Fisher's exact test). Methylation occurring at all cytosine-guanosine sequences (CpGs) near the transcriptional start site was confirmed in six of six tumors examined by bisulfite-DNA sequencing, including two early gastric carcinomas. In addition, loss or diminished expression of E-cadherin was confirmed by western blotting in four of the six tumor tissues demonstrating hypermethylation.Conclusions: The E-cadherin promoter frequently undergoes hypermethylation in human gastric cancers, particularly those of the undifferentiated-scattered histologic subtype. E-cadherin promoter hypermethylation is associated with decreased expression and may occur early in gastric carcinogenesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]