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Genomic methylation variations predict the susceptibility of six chemotherapy related adverse effects and cancer development for Chinese colorectal cancer patients

Authors :
Wansheng Chen
Houshan Yao
Xiaomeng Sun
Mingming Li
Xun Zou
Shouhong Gao
Zhiqian Hu
Jiani Chen
Feng Zhang
Wei Chen
Hua Wei
Shi Qiu
Source :
Toxicology and applied pharmacology. 427
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Colorectal cancer (CRC) remains a major concern with high morbidity and mortality worldwide. Despite the positive influence of chemotherapy on the decline in CRC mortality, the negative influence of chemotherapy-related adverse effects (CRAEs) caused by capecitabine (Cap) remains a challenging problem. DNA methylation alteration plays a pivotal role in gene expression regulation. Here, we aimed to screen reliable and novel biomarkers for CRC diagnosis and CRAE prediction using the advanced Illumina Infinium MethylationEPIC (850 K) BeadChip. Paired tumor and normal tissues from 21 Chinese CRC patients who received Cap-based adjuvant chemotherapy were analyzed. CRC-related methylation was characterized by hypermethylated promoter islands and hypomethylated intragenic openseas; CRAE-related methylation was characterized by hyper- (or hypo-) methylated intragenic (or intergenic) regions. Based on three types of methylation profiles (differentially methylated probes, differentially methylated regions, and gene-function-differentially methylated regions), pathway enrichment analyses revealed that CRC-related genes were significantly enriched in the neuronal system, metabolism of RNA, and extracellular matrix organization; CRAE-related genes were abundantly enriched in pathways controlling regeneration functions and immune response. Finally, based on genes within the mostly related pathways and LASSO logistic regression selection, the integrated-methylation-marker systems developed here demonstrated high discriminative accuracy in both CRC diagnosis (AUROC = 1) and CRAE prediction (AUROC = 0.817–1). In conclusion, we conducted a comprehensive DNA methylation analysis of CRC patients with chemotherapy, which provided new insights into the formation of CRC and CRAEs. Most importantly, our findings identified potentially CRAE-related metabolic pathways and markers, providing a valuable reference for personalized medicine promising better safety. Trail registration: ClinicalTrials.gov , NCT03030508 , Registered 25 January 2017, https://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03030508?term=NCT03030508&draw=2&rank=1 .

Details

ISSN :
10960333
Volume :
427
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Toxicology and applied pharmacology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a4b184832b931bbf0589f0a035127748