PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

Screening of urine identifies PLA2G16 as a field defect methylation biomarker for prostate cancer detection.

  • William E Jarrard,
  • Adam Schultz,
  • Tyler Etheridge,
  • Shivashankar Damodaran,
  • Glenn O Allen,
  • David Jarrard,
  • Bing Yang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0218950
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 6
p. e0218950

Abstract

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BackgroundProstate cancer (PC) is a multifocal disease. DNA methylation alterations are not restricted to the immediate peritumor environment, but spatially widespread in the adjacent and distant histologically normal prostate tissues. In the current study, we utilized high-throughput methylation arrays to identify epigenetic changes in the urine from men with and without cancer.Design, setting, and participantsDNA urine samples were enriched for methylated fragments using MBD methyl-binding antibodies and applied to high density CytoScanHD arrays. Significant loci were validated using quantitative pyrosequencing and binary logistic regression modeling applied to urine sample analyses in a training (n = 83) and validation approach (n = 84). Methylation alterations in prostate tissues using pyrosequencing at the PLA2G16 locus were examined in 38 histologically normal specimens from men with (TA, n = 26) and without (NTA, n = 12) cancer and correlated to gene expression.ResultsMethylation microarrays identified 3,986 loci showing significantly altered methylation in the urine samples from patients with PC compared to those without (TA vs NTA; pConclusionPLA2G16 methylation defines an extensive field defect in histologically normal prostate tissue associated with PC. PLA2G16 methylation in urine and prostate tissues can detect the presence of PC.