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Copyright ©The Author(s) 2001. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.
World J Gastroenterol. Feb 15, 2001; 7(1): 136-139
Published online Feb 15, 2001. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v7.i1.136
Methylation status of c-fms oncogene in HCC and its relationship with clinical pathology
Jun Cui, Dong Hua Yang, Xiang Jun Bi, Zi Rong Fan, Department of Gastroenterology, Zhujiang Hospital, The First Military Medical University, Guangzhou 510282, Guangdong Province, China
Jun Cui, graduated from North China Coal Medical College in 1994 and got bachelor degree, graduated from China Medical University in 1997 with master degree, worked in Yantai Yu Huang-Ding Hospital, came to the First Military Medical University in 1998 to continue the study of doctor degree. Now physician-in-charge, lecturer, specialized in the genetic diagnosis and therapy for hepatocellular carcinoma, having 10 papers published.
Author contributions: All authors contributed equally to the work.
Supported by the Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province, No 990422
Correspondence to: Jun Cui, Department of Gastroenterology, Zhujiang Hospital, The First Military Medical University, Guangzhou 510282, Guangdong Province, China. Fanzr@fimmu.edu.cn
Telephone: 0086-20-85143369
Received: July 22, 2000
Revised: September 22, 2000
Accepted: September 29, 2000
Published online: February 15, 2001

Abstract
Key Words: carcinoma, hepatocellular/pathology, oncogenes, DNA methylation, receptors, colony-stimulating factor, genes, fms, gene expression



INTRODUCTION

The mechanism that DNA hypomethylation leads to activation of oncogene and occurrence of malignant neoplasm is being increasingly recognized by researchers. Normal DNA methylation plays important role in stabilizing the phenotype of cell. DNA methylation status reduction and/or pattern alteration are related to activation and abnormally high expression of some oncogenes and cellular malignancy[1-6]. c-fms oncogene encodes for colony stimulating factor 1 receptor (CSF-1R)[7], c-fms/CSF-1R was highlyexpressed in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) tissue, but the mechanism remained obscure[8,9]. In this study, restrictive endonucleases Hpa II/Msp I digestion and Southern blot were used to study methylation status alteration of c-fms oncogene in HCC tissue and matching circum-cancer liver tissue, meanwhile the relationship between the alteration and clinical pathology of HCC was investigated. The gist of this study was to clarify the mechanism leading to c-fms oncogene high expression in hepatocellular carcinogenesis.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Subjects

Thirty HCC patients were verified with pathological examination (25 males and 5 females, age range 32-76 years, mean 55 years). Fresh hepatic tissue of HCC focus and circum-tissues 2 cm from HCC focus were cut off, normal control was from HBV negative hepatic tissue of renal transplantation donor. All the tissues were washed with physiological saline and put in freezing tube, and then they were put in liquid nitrogen for storage.

Main reagents

Restrictive endonucleases Hpa II/Msp I were purchased from Japan TaKaRa Bio-Company. DIG random labeling and detection kit were purchased from Boster Bio-Company. Nylon transfer membranes used for Southern blot were purchased from Shanghai Bio-Company. c-fms plasmid was kindly provided by academician Gu Jianren in the National Laboratory for Oncogene and Related Genes, Shanghai Cancer Institute.

METHODS
DNA extraction

About 0.5 g hepatic tissue was triturated in mortar, and a dissolvent (10 mmol/L Tris-Cl pH8.0, 10 mmol/L EDTA pH8.0, 0.5% SDS) 500 μL was added. The preparation was digested with proteinase K and RNase, then it was extracted twice with saturated hydroxybenzene and once with chloroformisoamylalcohol (chloroform:isoamylalcohol = 24:1), and at last 2.5 volumes of absolute alcohol and 0.1 volume of 3 mol/L sodium acetate (pH5.2) were added to precipitate the DNA. The extracted DNA was dissolved in TE buffer (pH8.0), and DNA concentration was detersmined with an ultraviolet spectrophotometer.

Probe labeling

Plasmid extraction, restrictive endonucleases digestion, reclamation and purification were performed as the methods recorded in Molecular Cloning. The probe was labeled with DIG random labeling and detection kit.

Southern blot

Genome DNA 10 μg was digested with restrictive endonucleases Hpa II and Msp I 50 U each for 12 hours respectively. Digested DNA was examined with 0.8% agarose electrophoresis. The buffer used for electrophoresis was 0.5 × TBE. Electrophoresis was ended when 2 kb marker shifted to the middle of the gel. Photo was taken under ultraviolet ray transmission. The gel was immersed in 0.25 mol/L HCl for 10 minutes, washed with distilled water for 20-30 minutes, and then immersed in denaturalizing liquid twice for 15 minutes each time. The gel was again washed twice with distilled water, and then it was immersed into neutralizing liquid twice for 15 minutes each time. A piece of nylon membrane of the same size as the gel was cut, it was immersed into 2 × SSC for 20 minutes. Transfer was performed for 18 hours at room temperature by the capillary transfer method. Then the nylon membrane was taken out and washed several times with 2 × SSC. After this, it was fixed for 20 minutes under long wave ultraviolet radiation. The transferred nylon membrane was sealed in a plastic bag and then pre-hybridizing reagent was perfused into the bag. The bag was put in a 42 °C water bath for 2 hours, and then pre-hybridizing reagent was decanted off. The bag was sealed, after the hybridizing reagent containing the DIG-labeled probe had been put in. The bag was put into a 42 °C water bath and hybridized for 20 hours. After hybridization the nylon membrane was taken out, and showed coloration according to the instruction of the DIG random labeling and detection kit.

Pathological examination and classification

The tumors were variously classified into unifocal or multifocal, and massive or nodular (a main tumor mass with satellites). The size and inner-condition of the tumors were recorded. The histological grading was based on Edmondson standard I-IV scale.

RESULTS
Southern blot of HCC tumor tissue and circum-cancer liver tissue

Hpa II and Msp I are isoschizomers. Both can digest CCGG sequence, but when the sequence is methylated into C-mCGG, only Msp I can digest while Hpa II can not. Methylation status of the gene may thus be determined by relying on such a difference. The data in this study showed that after digestion with Hpa II, hybridizing bands of less than 6.5 kb in size were observed in 36.7% (11/30) of HCC tissue and 13.3% (4/30) of circum-cancer liver tissue, which resembled those of the hybridizing bands digested with Msp I. The results indicated that the methylation status of c-fms oncogene in the tissue was decreased (Figure 1, Figure 2).

Figure 1
Figure 1 Southern blot of HCC tissue genome DNA digested with Hpa II/Msp I. Lane 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11 Msp I digestion; Lane 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12 Hpa II digestion; Lane 13 λ DNA/Hind III markers; Lane 1, 2 normal control hepatic tissue; Lane 3-12 HCC tissue; Lane 8, 10 hybridizing bands of less than 6.5 kb in size appeared after Hpa II digestion
Figure 2
Figure 2 Southern blot of circumª²cancer liver tissue genome DNA digested with Hpa II/Msp I. Lane 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11 Msp I digestion; Lane 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12 Hpa II digestion; Lane 13 λ DNA/Hind III markers; Lane 1, 2 normal control hepatic tissue; Lane 3-12 circum-cancer liver tissue; Lane 4 hybridizing bands of less than 6.5 kb in size appeared after Hpa II digestion
Methylation status comparison of c-fms oncogene in HCC tissue and circum-cancer liver tissue

Hypomethylation rate of c-fms oncogene in HCC tissue and circum-cancer liver tissue was compared, the difference was determined, the result is shown in Table 1.

Table 1 Methylation status of c-fms oncogene (number of patients).
Methylation statusHCC tissueCircum-cancer liver tissue
Normal methylation1926
Hypomethylation114
Relationship between hypomethylation of c-fms oncogene and clinical pathology

The relationship between hypomethylation of c-fms oncogene in hepatic tissue and the sex, age and pathological Edmondson scale of patients was analysed; the results are shown in Table 2.

Table 2 Relationship between hypomethylation of c-fms oncogene and clinical pathology.
ItemTotal numberHCC tissue
Circum-cancer liver tissue
Number%Number%
SexMale251041.0312.0
Female5120.0120.0
Age(yrs)< 6022731.829.1
≥ 608450.0225.0
EdmondsonI-II14214.317.1
scaleIII-IV16956.3b318.8

Chi-square test showed that there was no significant relationship between hypomethylation of c-fms oncogene and sex and age of patients (P > 0.05). There was significant relationship between Edmondson scale and hypomethylation of c-fms oncogene in HCC tissue (χ2 = 5.66, P < 0.05), while there was no significant relationship between Edmondson scale and hypomethylation of c-fms oncogene in circum-cancer liver tissue(P > 0.05).

DISCUSSION

In the process of cellular carcinogenesis, genetic and epigenetic mechanism contributes to abnormal expression of gene. The genetic mechanism involves the mutation and chromosome rearrangement, with which genetic products of abnormal molecular structures can be produced[10-19]. The epigenetic mechanism mainly refers to an altered methylation status of 5’-cytosine in the DNA sequence, which leads to an abnormal expression of gene in quantity, but no change in DNA sequence and genetic product[20-24]. In the process of cellular carcinogenesis, the methyl groups in CpG islands of DNA are lost gradually. Although the accurate mechanism between DNA hypomethylation and cellular carcinogenesis remains obscure, some data showed that DNA hypomethylation could affect chromatin condensation in the middle stage, which led to a change and/or rupture of chromosome[25-31]. DNA hypomethylation is a kind of molecular structure leading to abnormal expression of gene; it facilitates a high expression of gene[32]. Highly specific DNA methylation types exist in human genomes, and are reflected in genetic characteristics of DNA, such as transcription, duplication, recombination, transposition and mutation. One biological function of human genome DNA methylation is to keep promoter of gene in silent status for long. 5’ methyl-cytosine in special DNA sequence can mediate the specific combination and interaction between DNA and some functional proteins. As the interactions locate in the core region which regulates biological function of gene, sequence-specific methylation of DNA can affect cellular function[33-39]. Furthermore, DNA methylation depends on combining special proteins, and it directly or indirectly induced conformational alterations of DNA. DNA methylation is a kind of modificatory mode of cellular DNA at transcription level. In human genome, CpG islands in house keeping genes including a great number of oncogenes are in the form of methylation. Transcription and expression of the methylated genes especially oncogenes are limited. Decline of DNA methylation status at special sites of oncogene induces abnormal expression of the gene[28,40-43].

c-fms oncogene locates at 5q 33.3 of human chromosome and encodes CSF 1R, which has tyrosine kinase activity[44]. c-fms/CSF-1R is highly expressed in hepatocellular carcinogenesis, and its expressing level in HCC tissue is higher than that in circum-cancer liver tissue. Through the mechanism of signal transduction, CSF-1R stimulates the growth and development of HCC[45-50]. The whole length of c-fms oncogene is 43 kb, in which there are 49 CCGG sites. The data in this study indicated that the hypomethylation rate of c-fms oncogene in HCC tissue was higher than that in circum-cancer liver tissue, while no hypomethylation of c-fms oncogene in normal hepatic tissue was observed. So hypomethylation is an important activating mechanism of c-fms oncogene in hepatocellular carcinogenesis. The data also showed that the hypomethylation rate of c-fms oncogene in Edmondson III-IV HCC was higher than that in Edmondson I-II HCC. All the evidence indicated that hypomethylation of c-fms oncogene might be an important late genetic incident in hepatocellular carcinogenesis. HCC with hypomethylation of c-fms oncogene may show the characteristics of higher malignancy and rapid development, and provide a clinical guide in the selection of surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy, and also in judging the prognosis of patients.

c-fms/CSF-1R is abnormally high-expressed in hepatocellular carcinogenesis at a late stage, meanwhile hypomethylation of c-fms oncogene occurs, and the hypomethylation rate of c-fms oncogene in HCC tissue is higher than that in the circum-cancer liver tissue. These data indicate that hypomethylation of c-fms oncogene is a kind of molecular mechanism leading to abnormally high CSF-1R expression and promoting the occurrence and development of HCC. So blocking the process of hypomethylation of c-fms oncogene, consequently decreasing a high expression of CSF-1R may have great clinical significance in decreasing malignant phenotype of HCC and improving prognosis of patients.

Footnotes

Edited by Lu HM Proofread by Ma JY

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