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Cited 23 time in webofscience Cited 25 time in scopus
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Comparison of Methylation Profiling in Cancerous and Their Corresponding Normal Tissues from Korean Patients with Breast Canceropen access

Authors
Jung, Eun-JungKim, In-SukLee, Eun YupKang, Jeong-EunLee, Sun-MinKim, Dong ChulKim, Ju-YeonPark, Soon-Tae
Issue Date
Nov-2013
Publisher
KOREAN SOC LABORATORY MEDICINE
Keywords
Breast cancer; Epigenetics; Carcinogenesis; Methylation
Citation
ANNALS OF LABORATORY MEDICINE, v.33, no.6, pp 431 - 440
Pages
10
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
KCI
Journal Title
ANNALS OF LABORATORY MEDICINE
Volume
33
Number
6
Start Page
431
End Page
440
URI
https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/20391
DOI
10.3343/alm.2013.33.6.431
ISSN
2234-3806
2234-3814
Abstract
Background: Aberrant DNA hypermethylation plays a pivotal role in carcinogenesis and disease progression; therefore, accurate measurement of differential gene methylation patterns among many genes is likely to reveal biomarkers for improved risk assessment. We evaluated the gene hypermethylation profiles of primary breast tumors and their corresponding normal tissues and investigated the association between major clinicopathological features and gene hypermethylation. Methods: A single reaction using methylation-specific multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification was used to analyze the DNA methylation status of 24 tumor suppressor genes in 60 cancerous tissues and their corresponding normal tissues from patients with primary breast cancer. Results: In cancerous breast tissues, 21 of 24 genes displayed promoter methylation in one or more samples. The most frequently methylated genes included RASSF1 (43.3%), APC (31.7%), CDKN2B (25.0%), CDH13 (23.3%), GSTP1 (16.7%), and BRCA1 (10%). APC was associated with lymph node metastasis, and BRCA1 was associated with negative estrogen receptor and negative progesterone receptor expression. In normal breast tissues, 8 of 24 tumor suppressor genes displayed promoter hypermethylation; CDKN2B (28.3%) and RASSF1 (8.3%) hypermethylation were most frequently observed. Conclusions: RASSF1 and CDKN2B hypermethylation in Korean breast cancer patients were the most frequent in cancerous tissue and corresponding normal tissue, respectively. Our data indicates that methylation of specific genes is a frequent event in morphologically normal breast tissues adjacent to breast tumors as well as the corresponding breast cancers. This study also suggests that gene methylation is linked to various pathological features of breast cancer; however, this requires confirmation in a larger study.
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