Global DNA Hypomethylation in Epithelial Ovarian Cancer: Passive Demethylation and Association with Genomic Instability

Wa Zhang(University of Nebraska Medical Center), David Klinkebiel(University of Nebraska Medical Center), Carter J. Barger(University of Nebraska Medical Center), Sanjit Pandey(University of Nebraska Medical Center), Chittibabu Guda(University of Nebraska Medical Center), Austin Miller(Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center), Stacey N. Akers(Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center), Kunle Odunsi(Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center), Adam R. Karpf(University of Nebraska Medical Center)
Cancers
March 24, 2020
Cited by 145Open Access
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Abstract

A hallmark of human cancer is global DNA hypomethylation (GDHO), but the mechanisms accounting for this defect and its pathological consequences have not been investigated in human epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC). In EOC, GDHO was associated with advanced disease and reduced overall and disease-free survival. GDHO (+) EOC tumors displayed a proliferative gene expression signature, including FOXM1 and CCNE1 overexpression. Furthermore, DNA hypomethylation in these tumors was enriched within genomic blocks (hypomethylated blocks) that overlapped late-replicating regions, lamina-associated domains, PRC2 binding sites, and the H3K27me3 histone mark. Increased proliferation coupled with hypomethylated blocks at late-replicating regions suggests a passive hypomethylation mechanism. This hypothesis was further supported by our observation that cytosine DNA methyltransferases (DNMTs) and UHRF1 showed significantly reduced expression in GDHO (+) EOC after normalization to canonical proliferation markers, including MKI67. Finally, GDHO (+) EOC tumors had elevated chromosomal instability (CIN), and copy number alterations (CNA) were enriched at the DNA hypomethylated blocks. Together, these findings implicate a passive DNA demethylation mechanism in ovarian cancer that is associated with genomic instability and poor prognosis.


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