4.8 Article

Intratumor heterogeneity of breast cancer detected by epialleles shows association with hypoxic microenvironment

Journal

THERANOSTICS
Volume 11, Issue 9, Pages 4403-4420

Publisher

IVYSPRING INT PUBL
DOI: 10.7150/thno.53737

Keywords

breast cancer; intratumor DNA methylation heterogeneity; epiallele; methylation patterns; hypoxic microenvironment

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61972116]
  2. Applied Technology Research and Development Plan of Heilongjiang Province [GA20C018]
  3. Innovative Scientific Research Fund of Harbin Medical University [2018-KYYWF-0456]
  4. Nn10 Program of Harbin Medical University Cancer Hospital

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In breast cancer, high intratumor DNA methylation heterogeneity may lead to drug resistance, metastasis, and poor prognosis. The analysis of differential epialleles between tumor core and periphery regions reveals a correlation between intratumor methylation heterogeneity and hypoxic microenvironment, which could provide guidance for developing effective treatment schemes for breast cancer patients.
Rationale: In breast cancer, high intratumor DNA methylation heterogeneity can lead to drug-resistant, metastasis and poor prognosis of tumors, which increases the complexity of cancer diagnosis and treatment. However, most studies are limited to average DNA methylation level of individual CpGs and ignore heterogeneous DNA methylation patterns of cell subpopulations within the tumor. Thus, quantifying the variability in DNA methylation pattern in sequencing reads is valuable for understanding intratumor heterogeneity. Methods: We performed Reduced Representation Bisulfite Sequencing and RNA sequencing for tumor core and tumor periphery regions within one breast tumor. By developing a method named epialleJS based on Jensen-Shannon divergence, we detected the differential epialleles between tumor core and tumor periphery (CPDEs). We then explored the correlation between intratumor methylation heterogeneity and hypoxic microenvironment in TCGA breast cancer cohort. Results: More than 70% of CPDEs had higher epipolymorphism in tumor core than tumor periphery, and these CPDEs had lower methylation in tumor core. The CPDEs with lower methylation in tumor core may associate with hypoxic tumor microenvironment. Moreover, we identified a signature of five hypoxia-related DNA methylation markers which can predict the prognosis of breast cancer patients, including a CpG site cg15190451 in gene SLC16A5. Furthermore, immunohistochemical analysis confirmed that the expression of SLC16A5 was associated with clinicopathological characteristics and survival of breast cancer patients. Conclusions: The analysis of intratumor DNA methylation heterogeneity based on epialleles reveals that disordered methylation patterns in tumor core are associated with hypoxic microenvironment, which provides a framework for understanding biological heterogeneous behavior and guidance for developing effective treatment schemes for breast cancer patients.

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