Detection in Fecal DNA of Colon Cancer–Specific Methylation of the Nonexpressed Vimentin Gene

Wei-Dong Chen(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Zhifen Han(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Joel Skoletsky(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Jeff Olson(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Jerome F. Sah(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Lois L. Myeroff(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Petra Platzer(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Shi‐Long Lu(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Dawn Dawson(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Joseph Willis(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Theresa P. Pretlow(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), James Lutterbaugh(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Lakshmi Kasturi(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), James K. V. Willson(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Jun Rao(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Anthony P. Shuber(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Sanford D. Markowitz(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute
August 3, 2005
Cited by 369Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Increased DNA methylation is an epigenetic alteration that is common in human cancers and is often associated with transcriptional silencing. Aberrantly methylated DNA has also been proposed as a potential tumor marker. However, genes such as vimentin, which are transcriptionally silent in normal epithelium, have not until now been considered as targets for cancer-associated aberrant methylation and for use as cancer markers. METHODS: We applied methylation-specific polymerase chain reaction to the vimentin gene, which is transcriptionally silent in normal colonocytes, and compared methylation of vimentin exon 1 in cancer tissues and in fecal DNA from colon cancer patients versus control samples from healthy subjects. RESULTS: Vimentin exon-1 sequences were unmethylated in 45 of 46 normal colon tissues. In contrast, vimentin exon-1 sequences were methylated in 83% (38 of 46) and 53% (57 of 107) of tumors from two independently collected groups of colon cancer patients. When evaluated as a marker for colon cancer detection in fecal DNA from another set of colon cancer patients, aberrant vimentin methylation was detected in fecal DNA from 43 of 94 patients, for a sensitivity of 46% (95% confidence interval [CI] = 35% to 56%). The sensitivity for detecting stage I and II cancers was 43% (26 of 60 case patients) (95% CI = 31% to 57%). Only 10% (20 of 198 case patients) of control fecal DNA samples from cancer-free individuals tested positive for vimentin methylation, for a specificity of 90% (95% CI = 85% to 94%). CONCLUSIONS: Aberrant methylation of exon-1 sequences within the nontranscribed vimentin gene is a novel molecular biomarker of colon cancer and can be successfully detected in fecal DNA to identify nearly half of individuals with colon cancer.


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