Abstract
The complexity of TP73 expression and its functionality, as well as the role of TP73 in tumorigenesis, unlike its cousin TP53, which is an established tumor suppressor, have remained elusive to date. In this study, we isolated two stem cell lines (HepCY & HepCO) from normal young and old human liver tissues. We determined TP73 expression in HepCY and HepCO, hepatocellular cancer (HCC) cell lines (HepG2, SNU398, SNU449 and SNU475), gastrointestinal cancer (GI) cell lines (Caco2 and HCT116) and normal skin fibroblasts cell line (HS27). Immunohistochemical analyses of TP73 expression was also performed in non-cancerous and adjacent cancerous liver tissues of HCC patients. The results show that TP73 expression is exclusive to the cancer cell lines and not the adjacent normal liver tissues. Moreover, methylation-specific PCR and bisulfite sequencing studies revealed that TP73 promoter is activated only in cancer cell lines by DNA methylation. Furthermore, ChIP assay results demonstrated that a chromosomal networking protein (CTCF) and tumor protein p53 (TP53) bind to TP73 promoter and regulate TP73 expression. Our observations demonstrate that a positive correlation in tumorigenesis exists between TP73 expression and DNA methylation in promoter regions of TP73. These findings may prove significant for the development of future diagnostic and therapeutic applications.
Similar content being viewed by others
Introduction
Mammalian TP73 (p73) is a member of a gene family that comprises TP63 (p63) and the well-characterized tumor suppressor TP53 (p53). The broad range of functions regulated and generally controlled by these family members includes stem cells biology, cell fate, embryonic development, differentiation, reproduction, metabolic processes, genomic repair, senescence, and changes in epigenetic marks and tumor suppression1. But unlike p53, both p73 and p63, play pivotal roles in the normal development of mice2. However, in contrast to TP53, which is mutated in half of all human cancers, TP63 and TP73 are seldom mutated even though they are also involved in tumor suppression. There are structural and functional similarities among the three homologous proteins. As transcription factors, their activities are governed by unique and shared post-transcriptional modifications and regulatory cofactors. TP53 enhances cellular responses to stress and development; whereas p63 and p73 proteins play important roles in embryonic development and differentiation although their biological function is intricate. The TP63 and TP73 genes are transcribed into different isoforms that encode proteins with adversarial properties: the TA-isoforms exhibit tumor-suppressor activity and the DN-isoforms operate as proto-oncogenes1. The TP73 gene encodes two different proteins, TAp73 (i.e. V1) and ΔNp73 (i.e. V2), and maps to the small arm of chromosome 1 (1p36), a region that is often deleted in several tumors and may harbor multiple tumor suppressor genes3,4. The current available data indicate that the major isoform and the full-length of the protein, TAp73α, is detectable in physiological systems5,6. As a transcription factor, p73 is activated in a similar manner to p53 in response to DNA damage and regulates the expression of downstream genes involved in cell cycle arrest and apoptosis7,8,9,10. However, there are other compounding functions of this gene that reflect its non-tumor-related characters, thus making it very difficult to assess its specific role in tumorigenesis10,11,12,13,14,15. In general, the p53 family performs as a signaling “network” engaging in crosstalk with various metabolic and stress signals to control cell development, differentiation, proliferation and death.
Epigenetic events that cause changes in gene expression are common in human cancers. These changes include DNA methylation, histone modifiers, microRNAs and chromatin remodelers16. Focal DNA hypermethylation of promoters of genes that are involved in tumor suppression and global hypomethylation of non-coding regions are both associated with gene-silencing in cancer11,17. DNA methylation and chromatin dysregulation can induce transcriptional repression at transcription start sites, which suggests their critical roles in tumorigenesis18,19,20.
CTCF is zinc finger protein that operates as a chromosomal networking protein CCCTC binding factor. This nuclear protein regulates and represses a wide range of genes including IGF221. As a transcriptional insulator element or a type of cis-regulatory element, it blocks enhancer-promoter communication to influence expression of genes22. Therefore, mutations in CTCF can lead to invasive cancers in breast, kidney (Wilm’s tumor) or prostate23. A previous study shows that CTCF epigenetically regulates p53 by codifying an open chromatin conformation that shields the p53 gene promoter from repressive histone marks24. This provides evidence for the critical role CTCF plays in regulating the expression of tumor suppressor genes.
In this study, we isolated two liver stem cell lines (HepCY & HepCO) from normal young (CY) and old human (CO) liver tissues and determined TP73 expression in normal human liver stem cells, hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) cell lines (HepG2, SNU398, SNU449 & SNU475), gastrointestinal (GI) cancer cell lines (Caco2 & HCT116) and normal skin fibroblasts cell line (HS27) to demonstrate the correlation of TP73 expression in tumorigenesis. We also studied the effect of DNA methylation on the expression TP73 in various neoplastic tissues and cancer cell lines.
Results
Normal hepatocyte stem-like cell culture and characterization
Human hepatocyte stem-like cells, HepCY and HepCO, were generated from human primary hepatocytes and were cultured for two weeks. The resulting HepCY and HepCO colonies were passaged at 70–80% confluency within 7–10 days. The phase-contrast photomicrographs showed HepCY morphologic changes from atypical fibroblast-like cells to atypical epithelial-like cells (Fig. 1A) through passages 1 to 6. The morphology of HepCO in Passage 8 shows hepatocyte-like cell structure (Fig. 1B, panel I). Both cells of HepCY and HepCO in high passages (HP, over passage 10) start to grow slowly but not proliferatively with typical hepatocyte-like morphology (Fig. 1B panels II & III).
Considering that liver-specific protein expression can be detected in hepatocyte cells, we measured expression of four genes specific to liver cells: ALB (encoding albumin), APOA1 (encoding apolipoprotein A1), B2M (encoding beta-2-microglobulin), F2 (encoding thrombin), and three genes that are highly expressed in liver cells: CYP27A1(encoding Cytochrome P450 family 27 subfamily A member 1) as well as a proto-oncogene MET (encoding met proto-oncogene, receptor tyrosine kinase) and a oncogenic gene PIK3CA (encoding phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate 3-kinase catalytic subunit alpha). The results show that the level of gene expression of ALB, APOA1, F2 were dramatically down-regulated in high passages of HepCY and HepCO cells; the expression of CYP27A1 gene was slightly decreased in high passages and the levels of B2M and PIK3CA were not altered in different passages. In contrast, a dramatically elevated expression of MET gene occurs in passage 4 (Fig. 1C, panel I). Moreover, we determined alterations in the gene expression levels of tumor proteins, TP53, TP73 and PRDM16 (PR/SET domain 16), MEGF6 (Multiple EGF like domains 6), CEP104 (Centrosomal protein 104) and DFFB (DNA fragmentation factor subunit beta), which are in proximity to the TP73 gene locus in chromosome 1p36.32 region. The results demonstrate the absence of visible alterations in expression of the genes among the different passages except for the PRDM16 gene in passage 6 of HepCY (Fig. 1C, panel II).
These data indicate that HepCY and HepCO that are isolated from normal young and old human liver hepatocytes are liver stem cells, perhaps hepatocyte stem cells that can vouch for the tumor protein TP73’s lack of involvement in liver stem cell proliferation.
TP73 gene expression in HCC and GI Cancer
The genes that are proximal to TP73 (i.e. PRDM16, MEGF6, CEP104 and DFFB) in the region of chromosome 1 p36.32 (Fig. 2A), were assessed for their expression in human normal liver stem cells (HepCY and HepCO), hepatocellular cancer (HCC) cell lines (HepG2, SNU398, SNU449 & SNU475), gastrointestinal cancer (GI) cell lines (Caco2 & HCT116), and normal skin fibroblast cell line (HS27) by RT-PCR (Fig. 2BI). Surprisingly, the results show that TP73 only expresses in cancer cell lines albeit to varying levels but not in normal liver stem cells (HepCY and HepCO) or in normal foreskin human fibroblast cell line (HS27). We further analyzed related genes (ALB, AFP, CTCF, MET, TP53 and PIK3CA) in human normal liver stem, hepatocellular cancer (HCC) cell lines, gastrointestinal cancer (GI) cell lines and normal skin fibroblasts cell line by using RT-PCR (Fig. 2BII). The results show that these genes may not be related to tumorigenesis. The expression of tumor protein p73 (TP73) in cancer cells suggests that it is positively correlated with tumorigenesis.
To confirm the elevated expression of TP73 gene in tumorigenesis, we analyzed the TP73 protein level in human normal liver tissues and liver non-cancerous (Cancer-adjacent tissue) and cancerous tissues of HCC patients by immunohistochemistry. The results show that TP73 only expresses in HCC patients (Fig. 2C).
TP73 gene expression is activated at its promoter site by DNA methylation
DNA methylation patterns are often altered significantly in cancer cells including those from HCC patients. Growing evidence suggests that aberrant DNA methylation of CpG islands around promoter regions can have the same effect as coding region mutations, leading to the inactivation of tumor suppressor genes18. Because the promoter region of TP73 contains four typical CpG islands (Fig. 3A), we examined their methylation state in genomic DNA isolated from nine cell lines (three normal cells and six HCC & GI cancer cell lines) utilizing methylation-specific PCR (Fig. 3B) and bisulfite sequencing (Fig. 3C). These results showed a positive correlation between high-levels of TP73 expression and methylation upstream of the TP73 promoter in human HCC and GI cancer cell lines (Fig. 2). In six HCC and GI cancer cell lines, we observed dramatically markedly expression of TP73, cytosine residues of CpG dinucleotides in the TP73 promoter region (−1479 to −1226), which were almost completely methylated, whereas those cytosine residues in normal cell lines (HepCY, HepCO and HS27), which lost TP73 expression, were entirely methylation-free (Fig. 3C). Thus, our results confirmed hypermethylation in this region of the TP73 promoter, which activates TP73 expression. The data demonstrate a comprehensive profile of TP73 activation at its promoter site by DNA methylation in human HCC cell lines as well as GI Cancer cell lines.
CTCF and TP53 are involved the regulation of TP73 gene expression
CTCF is a chromosomal networking protein CCCTC binding factor and a key regulator and repressor of IGF221. CTCF, as a transcriptional insulator element, can block communication between enhancers and upstream promoters, thereby regulating expression23. We further investigated the regulation of TP73 gene expression by ChIP assay (Fig. 4A). Results show that TP53 association with CTCF involved TP73 gene regulation by binding to TP73 promoter (Fig. 4B) in hepatocellular cancer (HCC) cell lines (HepG2 & SNU449) and gastrointestinal cancer (GI) cell line (Caco2). When compared to normal liver hepatocyte stem-like cells and normal skin fibroblasts, CHIP assay demonstrates the dysregulation of TP73 expression in HCC cells and GI cancer cells by TP53 and CTCF, possibly due to hypermethylation of TP73 promoter region (−1479 to −1226). This shows that CTCF regulates human TP73 gene expression through direct interaction with its homologue protein, TP53. However, when the TP73 promoter is methylated as shown in cancer cells, the dual CTCF-TP53 regulation is blocked. A schematic representation of presumable mechanism of regulation of TP73 gene expression is shows in Fig. 5.
Discussion
Cancer is the result of uncontrolled cell proliferation due to genetic DNA mutation or epigenetic DNA methylation among other possible etiologies. Self-renewal is a property shared by both cancer and normal cells25,26. During the past several decades, most studies have used the paired normal (non-proliferating cells) and the tumor tissues (proliferating cells) for studying the gene expression patterns in tumorigenesis. To study gene expression involving cell proliferation and differentiation and various underlying mechanisms for such possibilities and key features in tumorigenesis, the best approach is to compare normal stem cells with cancer cells or cancer stem cells27. Our data in this study showed that tumor protein TP73 expression is exclusive to cancer cells (Fig. 2B-I). By comparison, normal proliferating liver stem cells (HepCO & HepCY) and normal proliferating fibroblasts cell line (HS27), clearly show that TP73 is not involved in cell proliferation but is only involved in cell tumorigenesis. In other words, the function of TP73 protein is not required for cell proliferation per se, but it is related to cell tumorigenesis28. Moreover, by determining the CTCF, MET, TP53 and PIK3CA gene expression levels in normal proliferating liver stem cells (HepCO & HepCY) and normal proliferating fibroblasts cell (HS27) (Fig. 2B-II), our results also indicated that these genes in their normal status are not involved in promoting cell tumorigenesis.
Epigenetics involves heritable modification of gene expression rather than alteration of the genetic code itself. However, collaborations may exist between epigenetic changes which occur in all human cancers and genetic alterations which occur at the base of the DNA to drive the cancer phenotype. Epigenetic changes are not limited to only DNA methylation or histone modifiers. These changes may also occur with chromatin remodelers, microRNAs, and other apparatuses of chromatin16,18. DNA methylation, however, is the primary driver of transcriptional silencing, a hallmark of cancer cells18,29,30. Our results in the DNA methylation study showed that hypermethylation within the TP73 promoter activates TP73 gene expression in cancer cells (Figs. 2 and 3). Most DNA methylation sites control gene expression and therefore involve promoters that are associated with CpG islands. For instance, Gomez et al., observed that the methylation of varied CpG islands of the TP73 promoter differed significantly within its molecular subtypes in that he TP73 gene was not expressed when its promoter was methylated28. Their study further showed that there was a higher expression of exon 3′ of p73 (expressed only in ΔNp73 isoform reflecting a high histologic grade) in patients with wild-type p53. Previously, we showed that DLL4, a notch ligand, is silenced by DNA methylation at its promoter site31. Interestingly, it is rare to find DNA methylation at promoter sites in correlation with gene activation in tumorigenesis. We know of only one such example involving IGF2, in which a DNA methylation within the embossed IGF2–H19 locus’s differentially methylated region (DMR) activates IGF2 expression32. H19 DMR regulates the genomic imprinting of IGF2 and H19 genes by using both a non-methylated DMR on the maternal chromosome, which shields or insulates IGF2 from enhancers; and a methylated DMR on the paternal chromosome, which disables the adjacent H19. These mechanisms seem to reflect the interplay among CTCF, histone deacetylases and intact chromatin insulator complexes33,34,35. Currently, there are only 14 biomarkers derived from DNA-methylation studies that have practical and commercial applications for clinical tests in cancer diagnosis36. Our observations demonstrate that a positive correlation exists between TP73 expression and DNA methylation in its promoter regions in tumorigenesis. This finding may prove significant for the development of future diagnostic applications.
CTCF is a multifunctional protein with multiple roles. It acts as a transcriptional activator, a repressor or an insulator containing a highly conserved 11 zinc finger domains. It is a CCCTC-binding factor or chromosomal networking protein. It plays a critical role as a gene regulator and repressor of IGF2 when it mediates insulation at the H19-Insulin-like growth factor 2 (Igf2)21. As a transcriptional insulator, CTCF can interfere with the network of enhancers and upstream promoters, thereby regulating imprinted (parent-of-origin-specific) expression21. This key regulatory component of CTCF and the critical role methylation plays in controlling this locus was shown by methylation of the CTCF-binding site at this locus, which resulted in blockage of the binding of the zinc finger protein33,35. Therefore, mutations in the CTCF gene can have far-reaching effects on initiation and development of cancer. Published reports have linked CTCF mutation to invasive cancers of the breast and prostate as well as Wilms’ tumors24.
The TP53 signaling pathway is responsive to an array of cellular stresses that activate the TP53 protein, which regulates the expression of downstream genes that target cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, DNA repair, senescence, etc. Loss of TP53 function, through mutations in TP53 itself or perturbations in pathways signaling to TP53, is a common feature in most human cancers36. The most consequential role of p53 as a transcription factor and the “guardian of the genome” to integrate cellular responses by activating or repressing the expression of several target genes and microRNAs37,38. As for p53 epigenetic regulation, recent studies have shown that CTCF guards against p53 promoter repression by histone marks through the provision of an open chromatin configuration for p5324. This evidence provides support for the germane role of CTCF in the regulation of epigenetic effects of tumor suppressor genes and cancer development24. Likewise, our data confirm that TP53 and CTCF jointly and directly influence the activation of the TP73 promoter. Concomitantly, it can be concluded that CTCF is a potential activator and regulator of TP73 (Fig. 4) even though the mechanisms by which the CTCF/TP53 alliance is controlled by cellular signaling are not delineated. Based on our experimental findings, we propose a model or a scheme, which may exemplify the mechanism of this tightly regulated partnership (Fig. 5).
In summary, identifying the molecular mechanisms underlying these methylation changes will require a detailed understanding of gene regulation and chromatin remodeling that might shed light on cancer initiation and progression. In the context of this research, we observed a close association among CTCF, TP53 and DNA methylation at the TP73 promoter site. Further work on defining the setting of TP73 expression under cellular and pathological conditions will be pivotal for designing and implementing effective therapeutic regimen for cancer.
Methods
Cell culture
The cell lines and human tissues employed in this study have been approved by the Institutional Review Boards (IRBs) of Howard University and Georgetown-Howard Universities Center for Clinical and Translational Science (GHUCCTS). Adult patients whose tissues were processed at MedStar Georgetown University Hospital and used for the immunohistochemistry procedure signed informed consent according to IRB guidelines. The tissues were collected at the time of surgery and immediately stored in liquid nitrogen or −80 °C freezer until use. These liver tissues were supplied by the Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center Histopathology & Tissue Shared Resources. All methods and experimental protocols were performed according to the pertinent guidelines and regulations approved by Howard University as well as GHUCCTS’ IRBs. HCC diagnosis was based on imaging criteria or clinical stages; whereas histology was based on the TNM system.
Human hepatocyte stem-like cells, HepCY and HepCO, were generated from human primary hepatocytes (GIBCO, Cat# HMCPTS). The original human primary hepatocytes from GIBCO were grown in DMEM media containing 12.5% fetal bovine serum (FBS) and 1X NEAA at 37 °C, and 5% CO2 (Life Technologies, Bethesda, MD). After 2 weeks of culture, colonies were observed with an Olympus IX73 light microscope equipped with a phase contrast apparatus. The cells were split every 7–10 days at 70–80% confluency. The HepCY human hepatocyte stem-like cells were generated from a 21-year old human primary hepatocyte; whereas HepCO cells were generated from a 60-year old human primary hepatocyte. HCC (HepG2, SNU3958, SNU449, and SNU475) and GI (Caco2 and HCT116) cancer cell lines, and normal human skin fibroblasts cell line (HS27) were obtained from ATCC (Manassas, VA) and cultured following the instructions of the supplier. Cells underwent low passages and were harvested at 75–90% confluency.
RT-PCR
The primers used for TP73 transcript variant 1 amplifications were as follows: forward/5′-GGA AGA TGG CCC AGT CCA CCG -3′ reverse/5′-GTG GAT CTC GGC CTC CGT GAA C-3′. The primers used for TP73 transcript variant 2 amplifications were as follows: forward/5′-ACC ATG CTG TAC GTC GGT GAC CC-3′ reverse/5′-GTG GAT CTC GGC CTC CGT GAA C-3′. The primers used in RT-PCR for all other mRNA in this study were: forward primer from start codon around 24 bp; reverse primer from stop codon around 24 bp; Tm around 60 °C and amplification for full length mRNA. All other primers were as follows: ALB forward/5′-ATG AAG TGG GTA ACC TTT ATT TCC CTT CTT T-3′ reverse/5′-TTA TAA GCC TAA GGC AGC TTG ACT TGC AG-3′; APOA1 transcript variant 1 forward/5′-AGG ATG AAA GCT GCG GTG CTG-3′ reverse/5′-CTG GGT GTT GAG CTT CTT AG TGT ACT CC-3′; B2M forward/5′-ATG TCT CGC TCC GTG GCC TTA-3′ reverse/5′-GCT GCT TAC ATG TCT CGA TCC CAC TTA AC-3′; F2 (Thrombin) transcript variant 1 forward/5′-ACA CTA TGG CGC ACG TCC GAG-3′ reverse/5′-CCC TAC TCT CCA AAC TGA TCA ATG ACC-3′; CYP27A1 forward/5′-ATG GCT GCG CTG GGC TGC-3′ reverse/5′-TCA GCA CTG TCT CTG CAG GAA CTG C-3′; MET transcript variant 1 forward/5′-ATA ATG AAG GCC CCC GCT GTG C-3′ reverse/5′-CTA TGA TGT CTC CCA GAA GGA GGC TG-3′; PIK3CA forward/5′-ACA ATG CCT CCA CGA CCA TCA TCA-3′ reverse/5′-GTT CAA TGC ATG CTG TTT AAT TGT GTG G-3′; PRDM16 transcript variant 1 forward/5′-ACC ATG CGA TCC AAG GCG AGG-3′ reverse/5′-GAG GTG GTT GAT GGG GTG AAA TGC-3′; MEGF6 forward/5′-ACG ATG TCG TTC CTT GAA GAG GCG-3′ reverse/5′-GTG CCT CGC TGG TCC ACC GCT-3′; CEP104 forward/5′-AGA ATG CCC CAC AAG ATT GGA TTT GTA G-3′ reverse/5′-GCG CTT GGC GTA CGT CCT GCT-3′; DFFB transcript variant 1 forward/5′-GCA ATG CTC CAG AAG CCC AAG AG-3′ reverse/5′-CTG GCG TTT CCG CAC AGG CTG-3′; TP53 transcript variant 1 forward/5′-GCC ATG GAG GAG CCG CAG TCA-3′ reverse/5′-TCA GTC TGA GTC AGG CCC TTC TGT CTT-3′; GAPDH transcript variant 1 forward/5′-ATG GGG AAG GTG AAG GTC GGA GTC-3′ reverse/5′-TAC TCC TTG GAG GCC ATG TGG GC-3′;
Immunohistology (IH)
Immunohistochemical staining was performed by the Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center Histopathology & Tissue Shared Resources at Georgetown University Medical Center. Briefly, immunohistochemical staining of normal and tumor tissue samples of liver was performed for human TP73 made in rabbit. Five-micron sections from formalin fixed paraffin embedded (FFPE) tissues were de-paraffinized with xylenes and rehydrated through a graded alcohol series. Heat induced epitope retrieval (HIER) was performed by immersing the tissue sections at 98 °C for 20 minutes in 10 mM citrate buffer (pH 6.0) with 0.05% Tween. Immunohistochemical staining was performed using a horseradish peroxidase labeled polymer #K4003 (Dako North America, Carpinteria, CA) according to manufacturer’s instructions. Briefly, slides were treated with 3% hydrogen peroxide and 10% normal goat serum for 10 minutes each and exposed to primary antibody TP73 (1:60, Abcam, Cat # ab14430) diluted in 1X TBS with 0.05% Tween 20 (Fisher, Pittsburg, PA) overnight at 4 °C. Slides were exposed to the HRP labeled polymer for 30 min and DAB chromagen (Dako) for 5 minutes. Slides were counterstained with Hematoxylin (Fisher, Harris Modified Hematoxylin), blued in 1% ammonium hydroxide, dehydrated, and mounted with Acrymount. Consecutive sections without the primary antibody were used as negative controls. The wash buffer used was 1X TBS with 0.05% Tween 20 (Fisher).
DNA methylation analysis
Genomic DNA was bisulfite-modified with an EpiTect Bisulfite Kit (Qiagen, CA, USA) according to the manufacturer’s protocols. Prediction of CpG islands in TP73 promoter and primer design for methylation-specific PCR was possible through the use of a web software (www.urogene.org); Primer pairs used for HepCY, HepCO, HepG2, SNU449, Caco2, HCT116 and HS27 cell lines in methylation-specific PCR at TP73 promoter down stream (F1/R1) were methylated forward/5′-GCG GCG GTT AGG AGA GAT TCG-3′ reverse/5′-CTA CAA CCG TCG CAA CCC CG-3′ and unmethylated forward 5′-TAG TGG TGG TGG TTA GGA GAG ATT TGG-3′ reverse/5′-CCT ACC TAC AAC CAT CAC AAC CCC A-3′; Primer pairs used for methylation-specific PCR and bisulfite sequencing at TP73 promoter upstream (F2/R2) were methylated forward/5′-CGT TTA GTT TCG GGT TTG TTT TTC GC-3′ reverse/5′-CGC AAA CTA AAT TCT CTA ACC GCA ACG-3′ and unmethylated forward 5′-GGG TGT TTA GTT TTG GGT TTG TTT TTT GT-3′ reverse/5′-GTG GGT GAG TTA TGA AGA TGT GTG AGT TAG TT-3′.
Chromatin-immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assays
ChIP assay was performed using a ChIP assay kit according to manufacturer’s instructions (Upstate Biotechnology). Rabbit anti-TP53 (Cat#2527) and Rabbit anti-CTCF (Cat#3418) for ChIP assay were from Cell Signaling Technology (Boston, MA). Primers for TP73 promoter were as follows: forward/F1) 5′-GAC CTG CTT CGG CCC TGC GT-3′; F2) 5′-CAG GAG AAG TGG GTG GCA AGC C-3′ F3) 5′-GGC CTG GTG TAC GTG GTC GAG-3′; F4) 5′-GGC TTC ACT GAC GCG ACT TTC CAA-3′; F5) 5′-CCA GGG TCC TGC TCG TAC CTC C-3′. reverse/R0) 5′-CGG GTT ATA TGG GCG CGG GGA G-3′; R1) 5′-ACG CAG GGC CGA AGC AGG TC-3′; R2) 5′-GGC TTG CCA CCC ACT TCT CCT G-3′; R3) 5′-CTC GAC CAC GTA CAC CAG GCC-3′; R4) 5′-TTG GAA AGT CGC GTC AGT GAA GCC-3′.
Data availability
Our data are available by request.
References
Costanzo, A. et al. TP63 and TP73 in cancer, an unresolved “family” puzzle of complexity, redundancy and hierarchy. FEBS Lett. 588, 2590–2599 (2014).
Sasaki, Y. et al. The p53 family member genes are involved in the Notch signal pathway. J. Biol. Chem. 277, 719–724 (2002).
Kaghad, M. et al. Monoallelically expressed gene related to p53 at 1p36, a region frequently deleted in neuroblastoma and other human cancers. Cell 90, 809–819 (1997).
Zhu, D. et al. LncRNA TP73-AS1 is upregulated in non-small cell lung cancer and predicts poor survival. Gene 710, 98–102 (2019).
Vikhreva, P., Melino, G. & Amelio, I. p73 Alternative Splicing: Exploring a Biological Role for the C-Terminal Isoforms. J. Mol. Biol. 430, 1829–1838 (2018).
Rodriguez, N., Pelaez, A., Barderas, R. & Dominguez, G. Clinical implications of the deregulated TP73 isoforms expression in cancer. Clin. Transl. Oncol. 20, 827–836 (2018).
Jin, Y. et al. Comprehensive analysis of transcriptome profiles in hepatocellular carcinoma. J. Transl. Med. 17, 273-019-2025-x (2019).
Barbhuiya, P. A., Uddin, A. & Chakraborty, S. Compositional properties and codon usage of TP73 gene family. Gene 683, 159–168 (2019).
Zhang, W., Zhai, Y., Wang, W., Cao, M. & Ma, C. Enhanced expression of lncRNA TP73-AS1 predicts unfavorable prognosis for gastric cancer and promotes cell migration and invasion by induction of EMT. Gene 678, 377–383 (2018).
Zhang, X., Zhang, M., Wang, G., Tian, Y. & He, X. Tumor promoter role of miR647 in gastric cancer via repression of TP73. Mol. Med. Rep. 18, 3744–3750 (2018).
Ye, H. & Guo, X. TP73 is a credible biomarker for predicting clinical progression and prognosis in cervical cancer patients. Biosci. Rep. 39, https://doi.org/10.1042/BSR20190095. Print 2019 Aug 30 (2019).
Botezatu, A. et al. Methylation of tumour suppressor genes associated with thyroid cancer. Cancer. Biomark 25, 53–65 (2019).
Mukhopadhyay, U. K. et al. TP53 Status as a Determinant of Pro- versus Anti-tumorigenic Effects of Estrogen Receptor-beta in Breast Cancer. J. Natl. Cancer Inst. (2019).
Bibi, F. et al. Detection of genetic alterations in gastric cancer patients from Saudi Arabia using comparative genomic hybridization (CGH). PLoS One 13, e0202576 (2018).
Tao, W., Sun, W., Zhu, H. & Zhang, J. Knockdown of long non-coding RNA TP73-AS1 suppresses triple negative breast cancer cell vasculogenic mimicry by targeting miR-490-3p/TWIST1 axis. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 504, 629–634 (2018).
Baylin, S. B. & Jones, P. A. Epigenetic Determinants of Cancer. Cold Spring Harb Perspect. Biol. 8, https://doi.org/10.1101/cshperspect.a019505 (2016).
Molnar, B. et al. Gene promoter and exon DNA methylation changes in colon cancer development - mRNA expression and tumor mutation alterations. BMC Cancer 18, 695-018-4609-x (2018).
Jones, P. A. & Baylin, S. B. The epigenomics of cancer. Cell 128, 683–692 (2007).
Ando, M. et al. Chromatin dysregulation and DNA methylation at transcription start sites associated with transcriptional repression in cancers. Nat. Commun. 10, 2188-019-09937-w (2019).
Wu, J. et al. Identification of Biomarkers for Predicting Lymph Node Metastasis of Stomach Cancer Using Clinical DNA Methylation Data. Dis. Markers 2017, 5745724 (2017).
Merkenschlager, M. & Odom, D. T. CTCF and cohesin: linking gene regulatory elements with their targets. Cell 152, 1285–1297 (2013).
Holwerda, S. J. & de Laat, W. CTCF: the protein, the binding partners, the binding sites and their chromatin loops. Philos. Trans. R. Soc. Lond. B. Biol. Sci. 368, 20120369 (2013).
Phillips, J. E. & Corces, V. G. CTCF: master weaver of the genome. Cell 137, 1194–1211 (2009).
Soto-Reyes, E. & Recillas-Targa, F. Epigenetic regulation of the human p53 gene promoter by the CTCF transcription factor in transformed cell lines. Oncogene 29, 2217–2227 (2010).
Lytle, N. K., Barber, A. G. & Reya, T. Stem cell fate in cancer growth, progression and therapy resistance. Nat. Rev. Cancer. 18, 669–680 (2018).
Clarke, M. F. & Fuller, M. Stem cells and cancer: two faces of eve. Cell 124, 1111–1115 (2006).
Lai, J. et al. Transcriptional regulation of the p73 gene by Nrf-2 and promoter CpG methylation in human breast cancer. Oncotarget 5, 6909–6922 (2014).
Gomez, L. C. et al. TP73 DNA methylation and upregulation of DeltaNp73 are associated with an adverse prognosis in breast cancer. J. Clin. Pathol. 71, 52–58 (2018).
Baylin, S. B. & Jones, P. A. A decade of exploring the cancer epigenome - biological and translational implications. Nat. Rev. Cancer. 11, 726–734 (2011).
Cedar, H. & Bergman, Y. Linking DNA methylation and histone modification: patterns and paradigms. Nat. Rev. Genet. 10, 295–304 (2009).
Yao, Z. & Sherif, Z. A. The effect of epigenetic silencing and TP53 mutation on the expression of DLL4 in human cancer stem disorder. Oncotarget 7, 62976–62988 (2016).
Murrell, A. et al. Distinct methylation changes at the IGF2-H19 locus in congenital growth disorders and cancer. PLoS One 3, e1849 (2008).
Bell, A. C. & Felsenfeld, G. Methylation of a CTCF-dependent boundary controls imprinted expression of the Igf2 gene. Nature 405, 482–485 (2000).
Takai, D., Gonzales, F. A., Tsai, Y. C., Thayer, M. J. & Jones, P. A. Large scale mapping of methylcytosines in CTCF-binding sites in the human H19 promoter and aberrant hypomethylation in human bladder cancer. Hum. Mol. Genet. 10, 2619–2626 (2001).
Jones, P. A. Functions of DNA methylation: islands, start sites, gene bodies and beyond. Nat. Rev. Genet. 13, 484–492 (2012).
Koch, A. et al. Author Correction: Analysis of DNA methylation in cancer: location revisited. Nat. Rev. Clin. Oncol. 15, 467-018-0028-9 (2018).
Williams, A. B. & Schumacher, B. p53 in the DNA-Damage-Repair Process. Cold Spring Harb Perspect. Med. 6, https://doi.org/10.1101/cshperspect.a026070 (2016).
Muller, P. A. & Vousden, K. H. P53 Mutations in Cancer. Nat. Cell Biol. 15, 2–8 (2013).
Acknowledgements
This research was supported by the National Cancer Institute and National Institutes of Health under subcontract award number U01CA185188 to Z.A.S. Additional support (in part) was given by the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities of the National Institutes of Health under Award Number 2U54MD007597. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
All experiments were conducted by Z.Y.; study concept and design: Z.Y. and Z.A.S.; analysis and interpretation of data: Z.Y. and Z.A.S.; drafting of the manuscript: Z.Y. and Z.A.S.; critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content: Z.A.S.; protocol consultation: C.D.P. and Z.A.S: manuscript review: H.W.R; limited experimental contributions: G.M. and E.O.; study supervision: Z.A.S.
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing interests.
Additional information
Publisher’s note Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Supplementary information
Rights and permissions
Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
About this article
Cite this article
Yao, Z., Di Poto, C., Mavodza, G. et al. DNA Methylation Activates TP73 Expression in Hepatocellular Carcinoma and Gastrointestinal Cancer. Sci Rep 9, 19367 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-55945-7
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-55945-7
- Springer Nature Limited
This article is cited by
-
Neuroendocrine differentiation distinguishes basaloid variant of lung squamous cell carcinoma
Diagnostic Pathology (2022)
-
Guest Edited Collection: Epigenetics within the tumor microenvironment
Scientific Reports (2022)
-
Long non-coding RNA tumor protein 73 antisense RNA 1 influences an interaction between lysine demethylase 5A and promoter of tumor protein 73 to enhance the malignancy of colorectal cancer
Human Cell (2022)
-
Statistical and bioinformatic analysis of hemimethylation patterns in non-small cell lung cancer
BMC Cancer (2021)
-
DNMT1-mediated methylation inhibits microRNA-214-3p and promotes hair follicle stem cell differentiate into adipogenic lineages
Stem Cell Research & Therapy (2020)