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LINE-1 hypomethylation is associated with poor outcomes in locoregionally advanced oropharyngeal cancer

Authors :
Mariateresa Casarotto
Valentina Lupato
Giorgio Giurato
Roberto Guerrieri
Sandro Sulfaro
Annamaria Salvati
Elisa D’Angelo
Carlo Furlan
Anna Menegaldo
Lorena Baboci
Barbara Montico
Irene Turturici
Riccardo Dolcetti
Salvatore Romeo
Vittorio Baggio
Stefania Corrado
Gianluca Businello
Maria Guido
Alessandro Weisz
Vittorio Giacomarra
Giovanni Franchin
Agostino Steffan
Luca Sigalotti
Emanuela Vaccher
Paolo Boscolo-Rizzo
Polesel Jerry
Giuseppe Fanetti
Elisabetta Fratta
Casarotto, Mariateresa
Lupato, Valentina
Giurato, Giorgio
Guerrieri, Roberto
Sulfaro, Sandro
Salvati, Annamaria
D'Angelo, Elisa
Furlan, Carlo
Menegaldo, Anna
Baboci, Lorena
Montico, Barbara
Turturici, Irene
Dolcetti, Riccardo
Romeo, Salvatore
Baggio, Vittorio
Corrado, Stefania
Businello, Gianluca
Guido, Maria
Weisz, Alessandro
Giacomarra, Vittorio
Franchin, Giovanni
Steffan, Agostino
Sigalotti, Luca
Vaccher, Emanuela
Boscolo-Rizzo, Paolo
Jerry, Polesel
Fanetti, Giuseppe
Fratta, Elisabetta
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Background and purpose Currently, human papillomavirus (HPV) positivity represents a strong prognostic factor for both reduced risk of relapse and improved survival in patients with oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (OPSCC). However, a subset of HPV-positive OPSCC patients still experience poor outcomes. Furthermore, HPV-negative OPSCC patients, who have an even higher risk of relapse, are still lacking suitable prognostic biomarkers for clinical outcome. Here, we evaluated the prognostic value of LINE-1 methylation level in OPSCC patients and further addressed the relationship between LINE-1 methylation status and p53 protein expression as well as genome-wide/gene-specific DNA methylation. Results In this study, DNA was extracted from 163 formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue samples retrospectively collected from stage III-IVB OPSCC patients managed with curative intent with up-front treatment. Quantitative methylation-specific PCR revealed that LINE-1 hypomethylation was directly associated with poor prognosis (5-year overall survival—OS: 28.1% for LINE-1 methylation p TP53) gene is often mutated and overexpressed in HPV-negative OPSCC. Since p53 has been reported to repress LINE-1 promoter, we then analyzed the association between p53 protein expression and LINE-1 methylation levels. Following p53 immunohistochemistry, results indicated that among HPV16-negative patients with p53 ≥ 50%, LINE-1 methylation levels declined and remained stable at approximately 43%; any HPV16-positive patient reported p53 ≥ 50%. Finally, DNA methylation analysis demonstrated that genome-wide average methylation level at cytosine–phosphate–guanine sites was significantly lower in HPV16-negative OPSCC patients who relapsed within two years. The subsequent integrative analysis of gene expression and DNA methylation identified 20 up-regulated/hypomethylated genes in relapsed patients, and most of them contained LINE-1 elements in their promoter sequences. Conclusions Evaluation of the methylation level of LINE-1 may help in identifying the subset of OPSCC patients with bad prognosis regardless of their HPV status. Aberrant LINE-1 hypomethylation might occur along with TP53 mutations and lead to altered gene expression in OPSCC.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....120b4b67ba7cda312909e192fb376212