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Molecular Oncology, Markers, Clinical Correlates |
Department of Pathology, The Gade Institute [H. B. S., L. A. A.] and Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics, Haukeland University Hospital [H. B. S., O. E. I.], N-5021 Bergen, Norway; Gynaecology Cancer Research Unit, Department of Gynaecological Oncology, St. Bartholomews Hospital and The Royal London Hospital School of Medicine and Dentistry, London EC1A 7BE, United Kingdom [N. M., A. R., I. J. J.]; and Department of Human Genetics, The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637 [H. B. S., S. D.]
| ABSTRACT |
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0.05), and loss of hMLH1 expression and
hMLH1 methylation was significantly correlated with lack
of p53 overexpression (P for both
0.05). Nuclear
hMLH1 staining and hMLH1 methylation did not
significantly influence survival. In conclusion, hMLH1
methylation was common and was significantly correlated with loss of
hMLH1 protein expression, MSI, diploid tumors, and lack of p53
overexpression. In contrast, hMSH2 methylation was
infrequent in this prospective and population-based series of
endometrial carcinomas. | INTRODUCTION |
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In sporadic colorectal, endometrial, breast, and gastric cancers, MSI is present in a substantial proportion of cases (4, 5, 6) . The frequency of MSI reported to date in sporadic endometrial cancers varies between 9% and 43% (7, 8, 9, 10) ; however, mutations in the DNA mismatch repair genes have been reported to be rare (11, 12, 13) .
Promoter region methylation has recently been demonstrated to be an important mechanism of gene inactivation in cancer (14, 15, 16, 17) . MSI has been associated with hypermethylation of the hMLH1 promoter region in sporadic colorectal cancer (18, 19, 20, 21) and gastric carcinoma (6 , 22) . Recent studies on sporadic endometrial carcinoma have found methylation of the promoter region of hMLH1 in 7192% of the tumors with MSI, whereas methylation of the promoter region of hMSH2 seems to be rare (13 , 23 , 24) . However, these studies were relatively small, and most patients were selected for inclusion according to MSI status. Therefore, prospective and population-based studies have been suggested to further elucidate the role of hMLH1 methylation in endometrial cancer and its clinical significance (23 , 24) . This kind of study is important to reduce selection bias and problems with external validity. The specific aims of this study were to assess the pattern and prognostic impact of hMLH1 and hMSH2 promoter region methylation and hMLH1 protein expression in a large, prospective, population-based series of endometrial carcinoma patients with long and complete follow-up.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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To investigate the potential selection bias in the patient population
from whom frozen tumor tissue was collected prospectively, patient age,
FIGO stage, histological type and grade, treatment, and survival for
these patients (n = 138) were compared with those of
the rest of the patients from Hordaland County treated for endometrial
carcinoma in the same period, but from whom fresh tumor tissue was not
available (n = 161). Curative surgical treatment was
more often possible in the group with fresh tumor tissue available
(92%) than for the rest of the population (77%; P <
0.001,
2
test). This is in accordance with the
current practice in the area; women ineligible for curative treatment
due to either high age or serious intercurrent or extensive disease are
less often referred to the University Hospital where the fresh tissue
was prospectively collected during primary surgery. In the group of
patients with fresh tumor tissue available, there was a somewhat lower
frequency of MSI of 33% (36 of 110 tumors with results available for
all five markers) compared with the whole population, which had a MSI
frequency of 41% (92 of 225 tumors with results available for all five
markers). There were no other significant differences in the patient
characteristics (27)
.
Immunohistochemistry.
Immunohistochemical staining was performed on formalin-fixed,
paraffin-embedded specimens according to the standard avidin-biotin
method (DAKO, Copenhagen, Denmark) as reported previously (27
, 28
, 30)
. Positive controls were sections known to express the
investigated antibodies. Negative controls were obtained by omitting
the primary antibodies.
For estimation of nuclear hMLH1 protein expression, the sections were
subjected to microwave epitope retrieval [750 W for 7.5 min and 500 W
for 20 min in citrate buffer (pH 6)] before incubation for 3 h at
room temperature with the hMLH1 monoclonal antibody, clone G168-15,
code 13271A at 1:50 dilution (PharMingen, San Diego, CA). For
estimation of nuclear hMSH2 protein expression, the sections were
subjected to microwave epitope retrieval [750 W for 7.5 min and 500 W
for 30 min in EDTA buffer (pH 8)] before overnight incubation at room
temperature with the hMSH2 polyclonal antibody, Ab-3, PC57 (Oncogene,
Cambridge, MA) diluted 1:500. DAKO TechMate 500 slide-processing
equipment was used. The normal staining pattern for hMLH1 and hMSH2 is
nuclear, and nuclei in stromal cells were used as internal positive
controls. A few cases showed weak cytoplasmic staining, but only
nuclear staining was recorded systematically. Staining intensity was
graded on a scale of 0 (no staining) to 3 (strong staining), and the
percentage of nuclear staining area was graded as 0 (no tumor cells
stained positive), 1 (positive staining in <10% of the tumor cells),
2 (positive staining in 1050% of the tumor cells), or 3 (positive
staining in >50% of the tumor cells). A staining index was calculated
as the product of nuclear staining intensity and staining area. Tumors
with a nuclear staining index
4 were categorized as having
normal expression, whereas those with a nuclear staining index <
4 were categorized as having loss of expression.
The immunohistochemical staining procedures and results for microvessel density counts and Ki-67, p53, p21, and p16 expression have been described previously (27 , 28 , 30 , 31) .
DNA Ploidy, S-phase Fraction, and Steroid Receptor Analyses.
In a subset of the patient population, DNA-ploidy, S-phase fraction,
and steroid receptor concentrations in tumor tissue were estimated.
Technical details and findings have been reported previously (27
, 29)
and were available for comparison with the hMLH1 methylation
and immunohistochemical results.
MSI.
Tumor DNA and corresponding normal DNA were analyzed using a panel of
five microsatellite markers for mononucleotide and dinucleotide repeat
sequences (BAT 26, BAT 40, D10S187, D18S55, and D18S58). The markers on
chromosome 18 and the mononucleotide markers were chosen because they
had previously been analyzed in studies of MSI in colorectal or
endometrial carcinomas (32, 33, 34, 35, 36)
. BAT 26 lies within the
hMSH2 gene on chromosome 2. D10S187 was analyzed because it
lies within the area of the PTEN gene that has been shown to
be mutated in a high proportion of endometrial cancers with MSI
(37)
. According to a generally accepted categorization,
tumors that exhibited shifts in electrophoretic mobility at two or more
of the five loci analyzed were classified as microsatellite unstable
[MSI positive (32
, 35
, and 38)
].
Methylation Analysis.
The methylation status of the promoter regions of the
hMLH1 and hMSH2 genes in the tumors was
determined by the M-PCR method described by Herman et al.
(39)
. Briefly, tumor genomic DNA was treated with sodium
bisulfite, which converts all unmethylated cytosine residues to uracil,
which is then converted to thymidine in the subsequent PCR. Primer sets
specific for the methylated and unmethylated versions of the
hMLH1 and hMSH2 genes were designed to the CpG
islands at the 5'-untranslated regions of these genes. For the
hMLH1 gene, one primer set specific for the unmethylated
sequence (hMLH1-U) and two primer sets specific for the methylated
sequence (hMLH1-M1 and hMLH1-M2) were used. The primers specific for
the unmethylated hMLH1 sequence have been described previously
(18)
. The hMLH1-M1 primer set consisted of
5'-CGTCGTTCGTTATATATCGTTC-3' (sense primer) and
5'-CCTCATCGTAACTACCCGCG-3' (antisense primer; Ref. 18
),
whereas the hMLH1-M2 primer set consisted of
5'-CGTCGTTCGTTATATATCGTTC-3' (sense primer) and
5'-GACGAAACTCTAATTTTCCGACCCG-3' (antisense primer). The 5'-end of the
primers comprising the hMLH1-M1 primer set are located at 865 and 950
bp, respectively, of the hMLH1 gene (GenBank accession number U83845),
whereas in the hMLH1-M2 primer set, the positions are 865 and 1045 bp,
respectively. The primers used for the methylated and unmethylated
versions of the hMSH2 gene have been described previously
(18)
. We chose to investigate all samples with two
different primer sets specific for hMLH1 promoter
methylation to allow the analysis of additional CpG sites in the
promoter region. All of the tumors were investigated with the
methylated primer sets at least twice.
The PCRs were carried out in a 25-µl volume containing 1x PCR buffer II (Perkin-Elmer, Foster City, CA), 2.5 mM MgCl2, 200 µM deoxynucleotide triphosphate, 0.5 µM of each PCR primer, 0.5 unit of AmpliTaq Gold (Perkin-Elmer), and approximately 40 ng of sodium bisufite-modified DNA. Amplification was carried out in a Perkin-Elmer model 9600 thermocycler at 95°C for 10 min, followed by cycling at 94°C for 45 s, 30 s at the annealing temperature (hMLH1-U, 64°C; hMLH1-M1, 60°C; hMLH1-M2 and hMSH2-M, 62°C; hMSH2-U, 66°C), and 30 s at 72°C (35 cycles for hMLH1-M1, hMSH2-U, and hMSH2-M; 40 cycles for hMLH1-U and hMLH1-M2), followed by a 10-min extension at 72°C. The positive control used for the methylated primer sets for hMLH1 was the SW48 cell line, which lacks hMLH1 expression and has previously been found to be hypermethylated at the 5' CpG island (19) . The positive control for hMSH2-M consisted of lymphocyte DNA treated in vitro with excess SssI methyltransferase (New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA), generating DNA completely methylated at all CpG sites, followed by treatment with sodium bisulfite. The positive control for the unmethylated primer sets consisted of sodium bisulfite-treated lymphocyte DNA from individuals without cancer. These DNAs were also used as a negative control for the methylated primer sets to exclude nonspecific cross-reaction. Reactions containing untreated DNA and no DNA were included as negative controls for all primer sets. The amplification products were separated on a 3% agarose gel and visualized by ethidium bromide staining and UV illumination.
Statistics.
Comparisons of groups were performed using the
2
test. Only the cases with conclusive
hMLH1 methylation results and results available from all
five MSI markers were included in the correlation studies. The median
follow-up period for the survivors was 9 years (range, 415 years).
None of the patients was lost due to insufficient follow-up data
(26, 27, 28)
. Univariate survival analyses of time to death
due to endometrial carcinoma (cause-specific death) were performed
using the product-limit procedure (Kaplan-Meier method), with the time
of primary operation as the entry date. Patients who died of other
causes were censored at the date of death. The Mantel-Cox test was used
to compare the survival curves for groups of patients defined by
categories of each variable. Data were analyzed using the SPSS software
package.
| RESULTS |
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Loss of nuclear hMLH1 expression was highly correlated with
hMLH1 methylation (P < 0.001). Normal
expression of hMLH1was seen in all 85 of the unmethylated tumors
(100%) and in 26 of 28 tumors classified as partially methylated
(93%). Of the 14 MSI-positive tumors that were also methylated, all
but 1 showed loss of nuclear expression of hMLH1. Five of the six
MSI-negative tumors methylated for hMLH1 showed normal expression of
hMLH1 (Table 2)
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Methylation of the hMSH2 promoter region was seen in only 2
of 138 cases (1.4%), as shown for a subset of patients in Fig. 2
.
These two cases were MSI-negative tumors, and both the tumors showed
expression of nuclear hMSH2 protein.
| DISCUSSION |
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3
of 5 markers) for further methylation studies and found 10 of 14
MSI-positive cases (71%) to be methylated for hMLH1,
whereas 2 of 28 MSI-negative cases (7%) showed a weak band interpreted
as partial methylation. Simpkins et al. (23)
selected 53 MSI-positive endometrial tumors with
2 of 7 markers
showing instability and found hMLH1 hypermethylation in 41
cases (77%), whereas methylation was seen in only 1 of 11 MSI-negative
cases (9%) studied. Our finding that only 10% of the MSI-negative
tumors were methylated for hMLH1 compared with 69% of
tumors with high MSI is in line with previous reports. However, we
found methylation in 29% of tumors with an intermediate number of
microsatellite-unstable loci, indicating that although hMLH1
promoter region hypermethylation plays a more significant role in
tumors that are highly microsatellite unstable, it is also a common
mechanism of inactivation in this less unstable group as well. The
apparently stronger correlations between MSI and hMLH1
methylation reported in previous studies could be due to smaller sample
sizes and to the fact that the cases studied were selected according to
MSI phenotype (13
, 23 , 24)
, which differs from the
population-based approach in our study. Of the 138 tumors we studied for hMLH1 promoter region methylation, 28 (20%) showed results suggestive of partial methylation. Simpkins et al. (23) used HpaII digestion to study the methylation of the hMLH1 promoter region (23) and reported that 3 of 53 cases (6%) had findings indicative of partial methylation. In our study, the relatively large number of cases with results suggesting partial methylation could be due to the different methods applied. Furthermore, in our study, all samples were investigated for methylation with two different primer sets to allow the analysis of a larger number of CpG sites in the hMLH1 promoter, which could also contribute to the difference. Our results suggest that not all CpG sites in the hMLH1 promoter region are equally methylated. This is in line with a recent study of hMLH1 promoter region methylation in colon cancer cell lines by Deng et al. (40) showing that different regions of the hMLH1 promoter tend to have different levels of methylation.
All of the 85 tumors found to be unmethylated in our series showed normal hMLH1 protein expression. This agrees with the findings reported by Simpkins et al. (23) , who investigated 24 endometrial tumors for hMLH1 protein expression and found that 10 unmethylated tumors all showed normal protein expression, and supports a strong correlation between hMLH1 promoter region methylation and hMLH1 expression. In our study, we found that 13 of 14 (93%) MSI-positive tumors methylated for hMLH1 showed loss of expression. The one hMLH1-methylated MSI-positive tumor that still expressed hMLH1 was reinvestigated and was found to have a heterogeneous staining pattern. We did not systematically record heterogeneity in the staining pattern for all 138 cases; however, one possible explanation for this finding could be that the M-PCR assay is likely to be more sensitive in detecting small clones of tumors with hMLH1 methylation than the immunohistochemical method. Five of the six MSI-negative tumors that were found to be methylated for hMLH1 showed normal expression of nuclear hMLH1 protein, indicating that these tumors still have one functioning hMLH1 allele. Additional studies will be required to establish a cause and effect relationship between hMLH1 methylation and loss of expression/MSI in endometrial carcinoma. However, the significant statistical correlation, which has now also been demonstrated in a population-based setting, further supports the evidence that hMLH1 promoter region methylation is central to endometrial carcinogenesis.
None of the aneuploid tumors showed methylation of the hMLH1 promoter region or loss of hMLH1 expression. To our knowledge, this is the first study reporting a significant correlation between hMLH1 methylation and DNA ploidy. However, a previous study on colon cancer found a correlation between MSI and DNA ploidy (34) . These findings are in line with the hypothesis of two separate pathways in endometrial tumorigenesis, one through nucleotide instability and mismatch repair deficiency and the other through aneuploidy, as hypothesized by Lengauer et al. (41) for colorectal cancers.
The p53 system has also been identified as a major tumor suppressor pathway in tumorigenesis (42 , 43) . None of the cases with loss of hMLH1 expression and only one of the tumors with hMLH1 methylation was found to overexpress p53 protein. Increased expression of p53 protein is indicative of p53 alterations, with the concordance between immunohistochemical nuclear p53 overexpression and mutations being reported as 76% in endometrial carcinoma (44) . Mismatch repair deficiency leads to mutations that contribute to the oncogenic process. The p53 gene, however, does not appear to be a target for mutations induced by defects in the mismatch repair system because p53 mutation rates have been reported to be equal in MSI-negative and MSI-positive endometrial tumors (45) . Our finding that tumors with hMLH1 methylation and loss of hMLH1 protein expression do not overexpress the p53 protein appears to be in line with this finding.
It is important to note that although the correlation between hMLH1 methylation and histological type did not reach statistical significance, only one methylated tumor was of the clear cell histological type, whereas the others were of less aggressive histological types. p53 overexpression has been found to be significantly correlated with aggressive histological types of endometrial carcinoma such as clear cell and serous papillary carcinomas (46) , and the possibility that the correlation between hMLH1 methylation and p53 expression found in this study might also be related to histological type should be kept in mind. Overexpression of p53 protein has also been reported to be significantly correlated with aneuploidy (47) . Taken together, these data imply that MSI and hMLH1 methylation might represent a separate pathway in endometrial carcinogenesis, distinct from those involving aneuploidy or p53 disturbances. The tendency toward a survival benefit seen for the group of patients with hMLH1 promoter region methylation could be explained by the correlation with diploid tumors and the absence of aberrant p53 protein expression, both of which were previously found to be strong prognostic markers in endometrial carcinoma (28 , 29) .
Methylation of the hMSH2 promoter region was found in only 2 of the 138 cases studied (1.4%) in our population-based setting. This is in line with one previous study failing to show methylation of the hMSH2 promoter region in 29 tumors investigated (24) and supports available evidence that methylation of the hMSH2 promoter region seems to be infrequent in endometrial carcinoma. The two tumors methylated for hMSH2 in the present study were both MSI negative. They also showed expression of nuclear hMSH2 protein, indicating that these tumors still have one functioning hMSH2 allele.
In conclusion, this prospective and population-based study reinforces the significant correlation between hMLH1 methylation, MSI, and loss of hMLH1 protein expression in sporadic endometrial carcinomas, as well as the lack of hMSH2 methylation in this group of tumors. However, nuclear hMLH1 staining and hMLH1 methylation did not significantly influence survival. Methylation of hMLH1 does not seem to account for all tumors with the MSI-positive phenotype in our population-based setting, indicating that other mismatch repair genes might also be involved and need to be studied further. Our data also suggest that hMLH1 methylation is involved in a distinct pathway in endometrial carcinogenesis, separate from pathways associated with aneuploidy or p53 disturbances.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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1 Supported by Norwegian Cancer Society Grant
D96032/D94070, NIH Grant CA81652-01, St. Bartholomews Cancer Research
Committee, the Blix Family Fund, Elena and Gustav B. Bulls Legacy,
and Kaptein L. A. Hermansens og hustru I. Hermansens Legacy.
The research has been approved by the Norwegian Data Inspectorate and
the Institutional Review Board at the University of Chicago (Protocol
9457). ![]()
2 To whom requests for reprints should be
addressed, at Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics, Haukeland
University Hospital, N-5021 Bergen, Norway. Phone: 47-55-97-42-00; Fax:
47-55-97-49-68; E-mail: hesa{at}haukeland.no ![]()
3 The abbreviations used are: MSI, microsatellite
instability; FIGO, International Federation of Gynecology and
Obstetrics; M-PCR, methylation-specific PCR. ![]()
Received 11/ 9/99; revised 5/16/00; accepted 6/23/00.
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