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The 5-Hydroxymethylcytosine Landscape of Prostate Cancer

Authors :
Martin Sjöström
Shuang G. Zhao
Samuel Levy
Meng Zhang
Yuhong Ning
Raunak Shrestha
Arian Lundberg
Cameron Herberts
Adam Foye
Rahul Aggarwal
Junjie T. Hua
Haolong Li
Anna Bergamaschi
Corinne Maurice-Dror
Ashutosh Maheshwari
Sujun Chen
Sarah W.S. Ng
Wenbin Ye
Jessica Petricca
Michael Fraser
Lisa Chesner
Marc D. Perry
Thaidy Moreno-Rodriguez
William S. Chen
Joshi J. Alumkal
Jonathan Chou
Alicia K. Morgans
Tomasz M. Beer
George V. Thomas
Martin Gleave
Paul Lloyd
Tierney Phillips
Erin McCarthy
Michael C. Haffner
Amina Zoubeidi
Matti Annala
Robert E. Reiter
Matthew B. Rettig
Owen N. Witte
Lawrence Fong
Rohit Bose
Franklin W. Huang
Jianhua Luo
Anders Bjartell
Joshua M. Lang
Nupam P. Mahajan
Primo N. Lara
Christopher P. Evans
Phuoc T. Tran
Edwin M. Posadas
Chuan He
Xiao-Long Cui
Jiaoti Huang
Wilbert Zwart
Luke A. Gilbert
Christopher A. Maher
Paul C. Boutros
Kim N. Chi
Alan Ashworth
Eric J. Small
Housheng H. He
Alexander W. Wyatt
David A. Quigley
Felix Y. Feng
Tampere University
BioMediTech
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Analysis of DNA methylation is a valuable tool to understand disease progression and is increasingly being used to create diagnostic and prognostic clinical biomarkers. While conversion of cytosine to 5-methylcytosine (5mC) commonly results in transcriptional repression, further conversion to 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC) is associated with transcriptional activation. Here we perform the first study integrating whole-genome 5hmC with DNA, 5mC, and transcriptome sequencing in clinical samples of benign, localized, and advanced prostate cancer. 5hmC is shown to mark activation of cancer drivers and downstream targets. Furthermore, 5hmC sequencing revealed profoundly altered cell states throughout the disease course, characterized by increased proliferation, oncogenic signaling, dedifferentiation, and lineage plasticity to neuroendocrine and gastrointestinal lineages. Finally, 5hmC sequencing of cell-free DNA from patients with metastatic disease proved useful as a prognostic biomarker able to identify an aggressive subtype of prostate cancer using the genes TOP2A and EZH2, previously only detectable by transcriptomic analysis of solid tumor biopsies. Overall, these findings reveal that 5hmC marks epigenomic activation in prostate cancer and identify hallmarks of prostate cancer progression with potential as biomarkers of aggressive disease. Significance: In prostate cancer, 5-hydroxymethylcytosine delineates oncogene activation and stage-specific cell states and can be analyzed in liquid biopsies to detect cancer phenotypes. See related article by Wu and Attard, p. 3880

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....76bad0a253d51237c4e9eaa88daea36b