Motiwala Tasneem, Majumder Sarmila, Kutay Huban, Smith David Spencer, Neuberg Donna S, Lucas David M, Byrd John C, Grever Michael, Jacob Samson T
Department of Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210, USA.
Clin Cancer Res. 2007 Jun 1;13(11):3174-81. doi: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-06-1720.
Previous studies in our laboratory have shown the progressive methylation and suppression of the gene encoding protein tyrosine phosphatase, PTPRO, in the livers of rats fed a methyl-deficient diet that induces hepatocarcinogenesis. Subsequently, we observed the methylation of PTPRO in primary human lung tumors and also showed its potential tumor suppressor characteristics. The present study was undertaken to investigate whether the truncated form of PTPRO (PTPROt), specifically expressed in naïve B lymphocytes, was also methylated and suppressed in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), a disease generally affecting B lymphocytes.
Initial screening showed that 60% of the 52 CLL samples analyzed using methylation-specific PCR assay were methylated compared with B lymphocytes from normal individuals, which were not methylated. The expression of PTPROt, as measured by semiquantitative reverse transcription-PCR, inversely correlated with methylation in the few samples tested. Analysis of additional samples (n = 50) by combined bisulfite restriction analysis showed that the PTPRO CpG island was methylated in 82% of patients with CLL compared with B lymphocytes from normal individuals. Furthermore, overall expression of PTPRO was reduced in CLL relative to normal lymphocytes. The PTPRO gene was also suppressed by methylation in the CLL cell line WaC3CD5, where it could be reactivated upon treatment with the DNA hypomethylating agent 5-AzaC. Ectopic expression of PTPROt in a nonexpressing cell line increased growth inhibition with fludarabine treatment, a therapy commonly used for CLL.
This study reveals the potential role of PTPRO methylation and silencing in CLL tumorigenesis and also provides a novel molecular target in the epigenetic therapy.
我们实验室之前的研究表明,在喂食诱导肝癌发生的甲基缺乏饮食的大鼠肝脏中,编码蛋白酪氨酸磷酸酶PTPRO的基因会发生渐进性甲基化并受到抑制。随后,我们在原发性人类肺癌肿瘤中观察到了PTPRO的甲基化,并证明了其潜在的肿瘤抑制特性。本研究旨在调查在初始B淋巴细胞中特异性表达的PTPRO截短形式(PTPROt)在慢性淋巴细胞白血病(CLL,一种通常影响B淋巴细胞的疾病)中是否也发生甲基化并受到抑制。
初步筛选显示,使用甲基化特异性PCR分析的52个CLL样本中,60%发生了甲基化,而来自正常个体的B淋巴细胞未发生甲基化。通过半定量逆转录PCR测量,在少数测试样本中,PTPROt的表达与甲基化呈负相关。通过联合亚硫酸氢盐限制性分析对另外50个样本进行分析,结果显示与来自正常个体的B淋巴细胞相比,82%的CLL患者中PTPRO CpG岛发生了甲基化。此外,与正常淋巴细胞相比,CLL中PTPRO的整体表达降低。在CLL细胞系WaC3CD5中,PTPRO基因也因甲基化而受到抑制,用DNA去甲基化剂5-氮杂胞苷处理后可使其重新激活。在一个不表达的细胞系中异位表达PTPROt可增强氟达拉滨治疗的生长抑制作用,氟达拉滨是一种常用于治疗CLL的疗法。
本研究揭示了PTPRO甲基化和沉默在CLL肿瘤发生中的潜在作用,也为表观遗传治疗提供了一个新的分子靶点。