Hypermethylation of the tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily 6 (APT1, Fas, CD95/Apo‐1) gene promoter at rel/nuclear factor κB sites in prostatic carcinoma
- 17 September 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Molecular Carcinogenesis
- Vol. 32 (1) , 36-43
- https://doi.org/10.1002/mc.1062
Abstract
DNA hypermethylation of CpG‐rich promoter sequences is associated with tumor suppressor gene inactivation in many human cancers, notably in carcinoma of the prostate and the urinary bladder. Recently, the mouse homologue of the tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily 6 (TNFRSF6) gene was reported to be inactivated by DNA methylation in various cell types. The Fas (CD95, Apo‐1) protein encoded by the TNFRSF6 gene is an important mediator of apoptosis, which also is downregulated in different types of human carcinoma. We therefore investigated the methylation of the TNFRSF6 promoter in prostatic and bladder carcinomas and cell lines. In a restriction enzyme polymerase chain reaction assay, four of 32 prostatic carcinomas and three of 15 advanced bladder carcinomas showed evidence of hypermethylation at the rel/nuclear factor κB (NFκB) binding sites essential for promoter activity. The DU145 cell line derived from a metastasis of a prostate carcinoma also displayed hypermethylation in this assay, which was confirmed by bisulfite sequencing. Treatment of DU145 cells with the methylation inhibitor deoxyazacytidine slightly increased Fas protein expression, as detected by flow cytometry analysis. In vitro methylation of the TNFRSF6 promoter at the rel/NFκB sites completely abolished its activity. Thus, although the TNFRSF6 gene can be inactivated efficiently by DNA methylation, hypermethylation occurs neither frequently nor extensively in human carcinomas and appears to play a limited role in downregulation of Fas expression.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- NFκB Mediates Apoptosis through Transcriptional Activation of Fas (CD95) in Adenoviral HepatitisJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2000
- CD95 ligand expression as a mechanism of immune escape in breast cancerImmunology, 2000
- Constitutive activation of IκB kinase α and NF-κB in prostate cancer cells is inhibited by ibuprofenOncogene, 1999
- Methylation-Induced Repression— Belts, Braces, and ChromatinPublished by Elsevier ,1999
- Frequent loss of heterozygosity on chromosome 10q in muscle-invasive transitional cell carcinomas of the bladderOncogene, 1997
- Identification of a candidate tumour suppressor gene, MMAC1, at chromosome 10q23.3 that is mutated in multiple advanced cancersNature Genetics, 1997
- Lymphocyte apoptosis induced by CD95 (APO–1/Fas) ligand–expressing tumor cells — A mechanism of immune evasion?Nature Medicine, 1996
- Inactivation of tumor suppressor genes and deregulation of the c-myc gene in urothelial cancer cell linesUrological Research, 1995
- Identification of a Silencer, Enhancer, and Basal Promoter Region in the Human CD95 (Fas/APO-1) GeneDNA and Cell Biology, 1995
- Cytidine methylation of regulatory sequences near the pi-class glutathione S-transferase gene accompanies human prostatic carcinogenesis.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1994