학술논문

DOK7CpG hypermethylation in blood leukocytes as an epigenetic biomarker for acquired tamoxifen resistant in breast cancer
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Human Genetics; 20220101, Issue: Preprints p1-6, 6p
Subject
Language
ISSN
14345161; 1435232X
Abstract
Background: Breast cancer (BC) is among the most common cause of cancer 10.4% and one of the leading causes of death among 20–50 years old women in the world. Tamoxifen drug is the first line therapy for BC however tamoxifen resistance (TR) has shown in 30–50% of cases that may face BC recurrence. Hence, TR early detection reduces BC recurrence and fatalities. The epigenetic alteration that happens by hypermethylation of tumor suppressor genes and hypomethylation of oncogenes has been suggested to be useful in early cancer or drug resistance diagnosis. Methods: This is the first study to investigate DOK7CpG hypermethylation in blood leukocytes of 31 TR (ER+) BC compared to 29 tamoxifen sensitive BC to evaluate DOK7as a potential TR biomarker. DNA was extracted from blood samples of all participants and MSRE-PCR and real-time PCR were used for quantification of CpG methylation alterations. Results: The means of DOK7CpG hypermethylation were obtained as 85.03%, 29.1% and 57.34% in TR, TS and normal control respectively. Significant hypermethylation were found among TR vs. TS (p< 0.001), TS vs. normal (p< 0.001) and TR vs. normal controls (p< 0.03). Online databases expression and survival analysis of DOK7showed increasing expression in TS groups vs. TR groups which have consistency with our methylation alteration results. The sensitivity and specificity of the TR epigenetic test were determined using ROC analysis showed 89.66% and 96.77% respectively and showed that 37.5% above hypermethylation is at risk for TR and breast cancer recurrence. Conclusion: There is a significant difference in the methylation ratio of DOK7between tamoxifen resistant and tamoxifen sensitive groups that may be useful in the early diagnosis of tamoxifen resistance in BC cases and cancer recurrence prevention.