Loss of expression and aberrant methylation of the CDH13 (H-cadherin) gene in breast and lung carcinomas

K. O. Toyooka, S. Toyooka, A. K. Virmani, U. G. Sathyanarayana, D. M. Euhus, M. Gilcrease, J. D. Minna, A. F. Gazdar

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

223 Scopus citations

Abstract

Expression of some members of the cadherin family is reduced in several human tumors, and CDH13 (H-cadherin), located on chromosome 16q24.2-3, may function as a tumor suppressor gene. In human tumors, loss of expression of many tumor suppressor genes occurs by aberrant promoter region methylation. We examined the methylation status of the CDH13 promoter in breast and lung cancers and correlated it with mRNA expression using methylation-specific PCR and reverse transcription-PCR. Methylation was frequent in primary breast tumors (18 of 55, 33%) and cell lines (7 of 20, 35%). In lung cancers, methylation was present more frequently in non-small cell lung cancer tumors (18 of 42, 43%) and cell lines (15 of 30, 50%) than in small cell lung cancer cell lines (6 of 30, 20%; P = 0.03). Only the methylated or unmethylated forms of the gene were present in most (73 of 80, 91%) tumor cell lines. CDH13 expression was present in 24 of 30 (80%) of nonmethylated tumor lines. All 18 methylated lines tested lacked expression irrespective of whether the unmethylated form was present, confirming biallelic inactivation in methylated lines. Gene expression was restored in all five methylated cell lines tested after treatment with the demethylating agent 5′-aza-2-deoxycytidine. Our results demonstrate frequent aberrant methylation of CDH13 in breast and lung cancers accompanied by loss of gene expression, although expression may occasionally be lost by other mechanisms.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)4556-4560
Number of pages5
JournalCancer research
Volume61
Issue number11
StatePublished - Jun 1 2001

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Oncology
  • Cancer Research

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