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Chromosome 7 gain and DNA hypermethylation at the HOXA10 locus are associated with expression of a stem cell related HOX-signature in glioblastoma

  • Sebastian Kurscheid
  • , Pierre Bady
  • , Davide Sciuscio
  • , Ivana Samarzija
  • , Tal Shay
  • , Irene Vassallo
  • , Wim V. Criekinge
  • , Roy T. Daniel
  • , Martin J. van den Bent
  • , Christine Marosi
  • , Michael Weller
  • , Warren P. Mason
  • , Eytan Domany
  • , Roger Stupp
  • , Mauro Delorenzi
  • , Monika E. Hegi

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

80 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: HOX genes are a family of developmental genes that are expressed neither in the developing forebrain nor in the normal brain. Aberrant expression of a HOX-gene dominated stem-cell signature in glioblastoma has been linked with increased resistance to chemo-radiotherapy and sustained proliferation of glioma initiating cells. Here we describe the epigenetic and genetic alterations and their interactions associated with the expression of this signature in glioblastoma. Results: We observe prominent hypermethylation of the HOXA locus 7p15.2 in glioblastoma in contrast to non-tumoral brain. Hypermethylation is associated with a gain of chromosome 7, a hallmark of glioblastoma, and may compensate for tumor-driven enhanced gene dosage as a rescue mechanism by preventing undue gene expression. We identify the CpG island of the HOXA10 alternative promoter that appears to escape hypermethylation in the HOX-high glioblastoma. An additive effect of gene copy gain at 7p15.2 and DNA methylation at key regulatory CpGs in HOXA10 is significantly associated with HOX-signature expression. Additionally, we show concordance between methylation status and presence of active or inactive chromatin marks in glioblastoma-derived spheres that are HOX-high or HOX-low, respectively. Conclusions: Based on these findings, we propose co-evolution and interaction between gene copy gain, associated with a gain of chromosome 7, and additional epigenetic alterations as key mechanisms triggering a coordinated, but inappropriate, HOX transcriptional program in glioblastoma.

Original languageEnglish
Article number16
JournalGenome Biology
Volume16
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 27 Jan 2015

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
  • Genetics
  • Cell Biology

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