Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0699790 (colon cancer)
28,837 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Chromatin remodeling enzymes are increasingly implicated in a variety of important cellular functions. Various components of chromatin remodeling complexes, including several members of the SWI/SNF family, have been shown to be disrupted in cancer. In this study we identified as a target for gene inactivation in colon cancer the gene for helicase-like transcription factor (HLTF), a SWI/SNF family protein. Loss of HLTF expression accompanied by HLTF promoter methylation was noted in nine of 34 colon cancer cell lines. In these cell lines HLTF expression was restored by treatment with the demethylating agent 5-azacytidine. In further studies of primary colon cancer tissues, HLTF methylation was detected in 27 of 63 cases (43%). No methylation of HLTF was detected in breast or lung cancers, suggesting selection for HLTF methylation in colonic malignancies. Transfection of HLTF suppressed 75% of colony growth in each of three different HLTF-deficient cell lines, but showed no suppressive effect in any of three HLTF-proficient cell lines. These findings show that HLTF is a common target for methylation and epigenetic gene silencing in colon cancer and suggest HLTF is a candidate colon cancer suppressor gene.
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PMID:HLTF gene silencing in human colon cancer. 1190 75

The SWI/SNF proteins are ATP-dependent chromatin remodeling enzymes that have been implicated in the regulation of gene expression. Recent studies have shown that members of the SWI/SNF superfamily can function as tumor suppressor genes. DNA methylation and transcriptional inactivation of the HLTF gene, which is a homologue to the SWI/SNF genes, have been observed in colon cancer. In the present study, we studied the DNA methylation status of the HLTF gene by methylation-specific PCR in 50 gastric carcinoma tissues, and seven gastric carcinoma cell lines and compared the methylation status with the levels of HLTF mRNA expression. DNA methylation of the HLTF gene was found in 25 (50%) of 50 gastric carcinomas, and levels of HLTF mRNA were associated with methylation status of HLTF (P = 0.027; Mann-Whitney U test). No correlations were found between HLTF mRNA levels and DNA methylation and T grade, N grade, tumor stage, or histological type. In corresponding non-neoplastic mucosae, DNA methylation of the HLTF gene was found in 1 (7%) of 15 samples. The methylated allele was not detected in any of 10 normal gastric mucosae from 10 healthy volunteers. Among seven gastric carcinoma cell lines, the KATO-III cell line showed loss of HLTF mRNA expression associated with DNA methylation. This loss was rectified by treatment with both Aza-2'-deoxycytidine, a demethylating agent, and trichostatin A, a histone deacetylase inhibitor. Chromatin immunoprecipitation assay revealed that the acetylation levels of histones H3 and H4 in the 5' CpG island of the HLTF gene were inversely associated with DNA methylation status. These results suggest that transcriptional inactivation of HLTF by aberrant DNA methylation and histone deacetylation may be involved in stomach carcinogenesis through down-regulation of HLTF expression.
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PMID:DNA hypermethylation and histone hypoacetylation of the HLTF gene are associated with reduced expression in gastric carcinoma. 1290 94

A subset of sporadic colon cancers has been shown to have microsatellite instability caused by an epigenetic inactivation of the MLH1 gene by hypermethylation of the the CpG island in its promoter region. We report here that in colorectal cancer, inactivation of the MLH1 gene is frequently accompanied by hypermethylation of the CpG island in the promoter of the mitotic gene checkpoint with forkhead and ring finger domains (CHFR). This was first observed in the colon cancer cell lines HCT-116, DLD-1, RKO and HT29. Among the 61 primary colon cancer samples studied, hypermethylation of the MLH1 and the CHFR promoter was found in 31% of the tumors. In 68% of all primary cancers (13/19) with MLH1 promoter hypermethylation, hypermethylation of the CHFR promoter was observed as well (P-value < 0.0001, Fisher's two-sided exact). Hypermethylation of the HLTF, MGMT, RASSF1, APC, p14 and p16 promoter regions were also frequent events, being observed in 48% (28/58), 40% (26/64), 21% (14/64), 50% (31/62), 43% (26/60) and 56% (35/63), respectively. However, methylation of these genes was not associated with methylation of either MLH1 or CHFR. The observed methylation profile was unrelated to Duke's stage. The coordinated loss of both mismatch repair caused by methylation of MLH1 and loss of checkpoint control associated with methylation of CHFR suggests the potential to overcome cell cycle checkpoints, which may lead to an accumulation of mutations.
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PMID:CHFR promoter hypermethylation in colon cancer correlates with the microsatellite instability phenotype. 1576 Sep 19

Genetic alterations occur during the adenoma-carcinoma sequence of colon cancer formation and drive the initiation and progression of colon cancer formation. The aberrant methylation of genes is an alternate, epigenetic mechanism for silencing tumor suppressor genes in colon cancer. The aim of this study was to determine on a global and gene-specific level the role of CpG island methylation in the initiation and progression of colon cancer. Consequently, we assessed the frequency of gene methylation in tumors representative of the commonly recognized histological steps of the adenoma-carcinoma progression sequence through the analysis of eight genes previously identified to be methylated in colon cancer, MGMT, HLTF, MLH1, p14(ARF), CDKN2A, TIMP3, THBS1, and CDH1. We observed that the proportion of tumors carrying methylated alleles increased from adenomas to adenocarcinomas but that the proportion of tumors with methylated alleles was not different between adenocarcinomas and metastases (69% versus 90%, P = 0.01 and 90% versus 81%, P > 0.05). The most substantial difference occurred between early and advanced adenomas (47% versus 84%, P = 0.018). Furthermore, we observed that the frequency of gene methylation at the different steps of the progression sequence varied between genes. Thus, the aberrant methylation of genes appears to increase most significantly during the progression of early adenomas to advanced adenomas, and the frequency of specific gene methylation at the different steps of the adenoma-carcinoma progression sequence varies in a gene-specific fashion.
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PMID:CpG island methylation of genes accumulates during the adenoma progression step of the multistep pathogenesis of colorectal cancer. 1670 52

Lysosomal autophagy inhibitors (LAI) such as hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) have significant activity in a subset of cancer cell lines. LAIs are being evaluated in cancer clinical trials, but genetic determinants of sensitivity to LAIs are unknown, making it difficult to predict which tumors would be most susceptible. Here we characterize differentially expressed genes in HCQ-sensitive (-S) and -resistant (-R) cancer cells. Notably, expression of canonical macroautophagy/autophagy genes was not associated with sensitivity to HCQ. Expression patterns of ALDH1A1 (aldehyde dehydrogenase 1 family member A1) and HLTF (helicase like transcription factor) identified HCQ-S (ALDH1A1high HLTFlow; ALDH1A1low HLTFlow) and HCQ-R (ALDH1A1low HLTFhigh) cells. ALDH1A1 overexpression was found to enhance LAI cell entry and cytotoxicity without directly affecting lysosome function or autophagic flux. Expression of HLTF allows repair of DNA damage caused by LAI-induced reactive oxygen species, leading to HCQ resistance. Sensitivity to HCQ is increased in cells where HLTF is silenced by promoter methylation. HLTF overexpression blunted the antitumor efficacy of chloroquine derivatives in vitro and in vivo. Analysis of tumor RNA sequencing data from >700 patients in the Cancer Genome Atlas identified cancers including colon cancer, renal cell carcinoma, and gastric cancers, that were enriched for the HCQ-S or HCQ-R signature. These results provide mechanistic insights into LAI efficacy, and guidance for LAI clinical development.
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PMID:ALDH1A1 and HLTF modulate the activity of lysosomal autophagy inhibitors in cancer cells. 2898 87