Consistent DNA Hypomethylations in Prostate Cancer

Int J Mol Sci. 2022 Dec 26;24(1):386. doi: 10.3390/ijms24010386.

Abstract

With approximately 1.4 million men annually diagnosed with prostate cancer (PCa) worldwide, PCa remains a dreaded threat to life and source of devastating morbidity. In recent decades, a significant decrease in age-specific PCa mortality has been achieved by increasing prostate-specific antigen (PSA) screening and improving treatments. Nevertheless, upcoming, augmented recommendations against PSA screening underline an escalating disproportion between the benefit and harm of current diagnosis/prognosis and application of radical treatment standards. Undoubtedly, new potent diagnostic and prognostic tools are urgently needed to alleviate this tensed situation. They should allow a more reliable early assessment of the upcoming threat, in order to enable applying timely adjusted and personalized therapy and monitoring. Here, we present a basic study on an epigenetic screening approach by Methylated DNA Immunoprecipitation (MeDIP). We identified genes associated with hypomethylated CpG islands in three PCa sample cohorts. By adjusting our computational biology analyses to focus on single CpG-enriched 60-nucleotide-long DNA probes, we revealed numerous consistently differential methylated DNA segments in PCa. They were associated among other genes with NOTCH3, CDK2AP1, KLK4, and ADAM15. These can be used for early discrimination, and might contribute to a new epigenetic tumor classification system of PCa. Our analysis shows that we can dissect short, differential methylated CpG-rich DNA fragments and combinations of them that are consistently present in all tumors. We name them tumor cell-specific differential methylated CpG dinucleotide signatures (TUMS).

Keywords: democratic method; diagnosis; epigenetics; hypomethylation; prostate cancer.

MeSH terms

  • ADAM Proteins / genetics
  • CpG Islands
  • DNA
  • DNA Methylation*
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Membrane Proteins / genetics
  • Prostate-Specific Antigen / genetics
  • Prostatic Neoplasms* / genetics
  • Prostatic Neoplasms* / pathology

Substances

  • ADAM Proteins
  • ADAM15 protein, human
  • DNA
  • Membrane Proteins
  • Prostate-Specific Antigen

Grants and funding

This research was funded by Wissenschaftliche Urologische Gesellschaft e.V., PTJ Jülich, BMBF. Stiftung für Altersforschung (Foundation for Aging Research), Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf, Prof. Dr. med. Hans-Helge Seifert, Universitätsspital Basel. M.J.A.-B. and D.G. have been supported by the European Union FET project Circular Vision (H2020-FETOPEN, Project 899417), by Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación, Spain Grant No. PID2020-119715GB-I00/AEI/ 10.13039/501100011033, and by Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Infrastructure of Precision Medicine associated with Science and Technology (IMPaCT) of the Strategic Action in Health (iDATA-MP).