Elevated MAL expression is accompanied by promoter hypomethylation and platinum resistance in epithelial ovarian cancer

We previously found that the gene encoding the Myelin and Lymphocyte protein, MAL, was among the most highly expressed genes in serous ovarian cancers from short‐term survivors (7 years). In the present study, we have found that this difference in expression is partially attributable to differences...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of cancer 2010-03, Vol.126 (6), p.1378-1389
Hauptverfasser: Lee, Paula S., Teaberry, Vanessa S., Bland, Amy E., Huang, Zhiqing, Whitaker, Regina S., Baba, Tsukasa, Fujii, Shingo, Secord, Angeles Alvarez, Berchuck, Andrew, Murphy, Susan K.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We previously found that the gene encoding the Myelin and Lymphocyte protein, MAL, was among the most highly expressed genes in serous ovarian cancers from short‐term survivors (7 years). In the present study, we have found that this difference in expression is partially attributable to differences in DNA methylation at a specific region within the MAL promoter CpG island. While MAL was largely unmethylated at the transcription start site (Region 1; −48 to +73 bp) in primary serous ovarian cancers, methylation of an upstream region (Region 2; −452 to −266 bp) was inversely correlated with MAL transcription in the primary cancers (R = −0.463) and ovarian cancer cell lines (R = −0.444). Following treatment of the OVCA432 cell line with 5‐azacytidine, methylation of Region 2 decreased from 73.3% to 34.7% (p = 0.007) while Region 1 was unaffected. This was accompanied by a 10‐fold increase in MAL expression. Since MAL transcripts are elevated in tumors from short‐term survivors, all of whom were treated with platinum‐based therapy, MAL may have a role in cisplatin response. We therefore determined the 50% growth inhibitory dose of cisplatin in 30 ovarian cancer cell lines and compared this to MAL expression. MAL transcript levels were higher in the resistant ovarian cell lines (p = 0.04). MAL methylation status may therefore serve as a marker of platinum sensitivity while MAL protein may be a target for development of novel therapies aimed at enhancing sensitivity to platinum‐based drugs in ovarian cancer.
ISSN:0020-7136
1097-0215
DOI:10.1002/ijc.24797