Detection of differentially methylated CpGs between tumour and adjacent benign cells in diagnostic prostate cancer samples

Author:

FitzGerald Liesel M.,Jung Chol-hee,Wong Ee Ming,Joo JiHoon E.,Bassett Julie K.,Dowty James G.,Wang Xiaoyu,Dai James Y.,Stanford Janet L.,O’Callaghan Neil,Nottle Tim,Pedersen John,Giles Graham G.,Southey Melissa C.

Abstract

AbstractDifferentially methylated CpG sites (dmCpGs) that distinguish prostate tumour from adjacent benign tissue could aid in the diagnosis and prognosis of prostate cancer. Previously, the identification of such dmCpGs has only been undertaken in radical prostatectomy (RP) samples and not primary diagnostic tumour samples (needle biopsy or transurethral resection of the prostate). We interrogated an Australian dataset comprising 125 tumour and 43 adjacent histologically benign diagnostic tissue samples, including 41 paired samples, using the Infinium Human Methylation450 BeadChip. Regression analyses of paired tumour and adjacent benign samples identified 2,386 significant dmCpGs (Bonferroni p < 0.01; delta-β ≥ 40%), with LASSO regression selecting 16 dmCpGs that distinguished tumour samples in the full Australian diagnostic dataset (AUC = 0.99). Results were validated in independent North American (npaired = 19; AUC = 0.87) and The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA; npaired = 50; AUC = 0.94) RP datasets. Two of the 16 dmCpGs were in genes that were significantly down-regulated in Australian tumour samples (Bonferroni p < 0.01; GSTM2 and PRKCB). Ten additional dmCpGs distinguished low (n = 34) and high Gleason (n = 88) score tumours in the diagnostic Australian dataset (AUC = 0.95), but these performed poorly when applied to the RP datasets (North American: AUC = 0.66; TCGA: AUC = 0.62). The DNA methylation marks identified here could augment and improve current diagnostic tests and/or form the basis of future prognostic tests.

Funder

Cure Cancer Australia/Prostate Cancer Foundation of Australia Young Investigators Grant

Cancer Council Tasmania/College of Health and Medicine Senior Research Fellowship

Gerald Harvey University of Tasmania Senior Research Fellowship

National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health

NHMRC Senior Research Fellowship

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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