Genes CEP55, FOXD3, FOXF2, GNAO1, GRIA4, and KCNA5 as potential diagnostic biomarkers in colorectal cancer

Abstract Background Colorectal cancer (CRC) is one of the leading causes of death by cancer worldwide and in need of novel potential diagnostic biomarkers for early discovery. Methods We conducted a two-step study. We first employed bioinformatics on data from The Cancer Genome Atlas to obtain poten...

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Main Authors: Nina Hauptman, Daša Jevšinek Skok, Elena Spasovska, Emanuela Boštjančič, Damjan Glavač
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-04-01
Series:BMC Medical Genomics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12920-019-0501-z
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spelling doaj-deb3a94befd84dbb91eb68d154f72a7e2021-04-02T14:36:32ZengBMCBMC Medical Genomics1755-87942019-04-0112111710.1186/s12920-019-0501-zGenes CEP55, FOXD3, FOXF2, GNAO1, GRIA4, and KCNA5 as potential diagnostic biomarkers in colorectal cancerNina Hauptman0Daša Jevšinek Skok1Elena Spasovska2Emanuela Boštjančič3Damjan Glavač4Institute of Pathology, Faculty of Medicine, University of LjubljanaInstitute of Pathology, Faculty of Medicine, University of LjubljanaInstitute of Pathology, Faculty of Medicine, University of LjubljanaInstitute of Pathology, Faculty of Medicine, University of LjubljanaInstitute of Pathology, Faculty of Medicine, University of LjubljanaAbstract Background Colorectal cancer (CRC) is one of the leading causes of death by cancer worldwide and in need of novel potential diagnostic biomarkers for early discovery. Methods We conducted a two-step study. We first employed bioinformatics on data from The Cancer Genome Atlas to obtain potential biomarkers and then experimentally validated some of them on our clinical samples. Our aim was to find a methylation alteration common to all clusters, with the potential of becoming a diagnostic biomarker in CRC. Results Unsupervised clustering of methylation data resulted in four clusters, none of which had a known common genetic or epigenetic event, such as mutations or methylation. The intersect among clusters and regulatory regions resulted in 590 aberrantly methylated probes, belonging to 198 differentially expressed genes. After performing pathway and functional analysis on differentially expressed genes, we selected six genes: CEP55, FOXD3, FOXF2, GNAO1, GRIA4 and KCNA5, for further experimental validation on our own clinical samples. In silico analysis demonstrated that CEP55 was hypomethylated in 98.7% and up-regulated in 95.0% of samples. Genes FOXD3, FOXF2, GNAO1, GRIA4 and KCNA5 were hypermethylated in 97.9, 81.1, 80.3, 98.4 and 94.0%, and down-regulated in 98.3, 98.9, 98.1, 98.1 and 98.6% of samples, respectively. Our experimental data show CEP55 was hypomethylated in 97.3% of samples and down-regulated in all samples, while FOXD3, FOXF2, GNAO1, GRIA4 and KCNA5 were hypermethylated in 100.0, 90.2, 100.0, 99.1 and 100.0%, and down-regulated in 68.0, 76.0, 96.0, 95.2 and 84.0% of samples, respectively. Results of in silico and our experimental analyses showed that more than 97% of samples had at least four methylation markers altered. Conclusions Using bioinformatics followed by experimental validation, we identified a set of six genes that were differentially expressed in CRC compared to normal mucosa and whose expression seems to be methylation dependent. Moreover, all of these six genes were common in all methylation clusters and mutation statuses of CRC and as such are believed to be an early event in human CRC carcinogenesis and to represent potential CRC biomarkers.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12920-019-0501-zColorectal cancerMethylationExpressionBioinformatics approachExperimental validation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nina Hauptman
Daša Jevšinek Skok
Elena Spasovska
Emanuela Boštjančič
Damjan Glavač
spellingShingle Nina Hauptman
Daša Jevšinek Skok
Elena Spasovska
Emanuela Boštjančič
Damjan Glavač
Genes CEP55, FOXD3, FOXF2, GNAO1, GRIA4, and KCNA5 as potential diagnostic biomarkers in colorectal cancer
BMC Medical Genomics
Colorectal cancer
Methylation
Expression
Bioinformatics approach
Experimental validation
author_facet Nina Hauptman
Daša Jevšinek Skok
Elena Spasovska
Emanuela Boštjančič
Damjan Glavač
author_sort Nina Hauptman
title Genes CEP55, FOXD3, FOXF2, GNAO1, GRIA4, and KCNA5 as potential diagnostic biomarkers in colorectal cancer
title_short Genes CEP55, FOXD3, FOXF2, GNAO1, GRIA4, and KCNA5 as potential diagnostic biomarkers in colorectal cancer
title_full Genes CEP55, FOXD3, FOXF2, GNAO1, GRIA4, and KCNA5 as potential diagnostic biomarkers in colorectal cancer
title_fullStr Genes CEP55, FOXD3, FOXF2, GNAO1, GRIA4, and KCNA5 as potential diagnostic biomarkers in colorectal cancer
title_full_unstemmed Genes CEP55, FOXD3, FOXF2, GNAO1, GRIA4, and KCNA5 as potential diagnostic biomarkers in colorectal cancer
title_sort genes cep55, foxd3, foxf2, gnao1, gria4, and kcna5 as potential diagnostic biomarkers in colorectal cancer
publisher BMC
series BMC Medical Genomics
issn 1755-8794
publishDate 2019-04-01
description Abstract Background Colorectal cancer (CRC) is one of the leading causes of death by cancer worldwide and in need of novel potential diagnostic biomarkers for early discovery. Methods We conducted a two-step study. We first employed bioinformatics on data from The Cancer Genome Atlas to obtain potential biomarkers and then experimentally validated some of them on our clinical samples. Our aim was to find a methylation alteration common to all clusters, with the potential of becoming a diagnostic biomarker in CRC. Results Unsupervised clustering of methylation data resulted in four clusters, none of which had a known common genetic or epigenetic event, such as mutations or methylation. The intersect among clusters and regulatory regions resulted in 590 aberrantly methylated probes, belonging to 198 differentially expressed genes. After performing pathway and functional analysis on differentially expressed genes, we selected six genes: CEP55, FOXD3, FOXF2, GNAO1, GRIA4 and KCNA5, for further experimental validation on our own clinical samples. In silico analysis demonstrated that CEP55 was hypomethylated in 98.7% and up-regulated in 95.0% of samples. Genes FOXD3, FOXF2, GNAO1, GRIA4 and KCNA5 were hypermethylated in 97.9, 81.1, 80.3, 98.4 and 94.0%, and down-regulated in 98.3, 98.9, 98.1, 98.1 and 98.6% of samples, respectively. Our experimental data show CEP55 was hypomethylated in 97.3% of samples and down-regulated in all samples, while FOXD3, FOXF2, GNAO1, GRIA4 and KCNA5 were hypermethylated in 100.0, 90.2, 100.0, 99.1 and 100.0%, and down-regulated in 68.0, 76.0, 96.0, 95.2 and 84.0% of samples, respectively. Results of in silico and our experimental analyses showed that more than 97% of samples had at least four methylation markers altered. Conclusions Using bioinformatics followed by experimental validation, we identified a set of six genes that were differentially expressed in CRC compared to normal mucosa and whose expression seems to be methylation dependent. Moreover, all of these six genes were common in all methylation clusters and mutation statuses of CRC and as such are believed to be an early event in human CRC carcinogenesis and to represent potential CRC biomarkers.
topic Colorectal cancer
Methylation
Expression
Bioinformatics approach
Experimental validation
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12920-019-0501-z
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