Frontiers in Oncology (Mar 2021)

Epigenetic Regulation of Claudin-1 in the Development of Ovarian Cancer Recurrence and Drug Resistance

  • Zachary R. Visco,
  • Gregory Sfakianos,
  • Carole Grenier,
  • Carole Grenier,
  • Marie-Helene Boudreau,
  • Sabrina Simpson,
  • Isabel Rodriguez,
  • Regina Whitaker,
  • Derek Y. Yao,
  • Andrew Berchuck,
  • Susan K. Murphy,
  • Susan K. Murphy,
  • Zhiqing Huang,
  • Zhiqing Huang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2021.620873
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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Over 21,000 women are diagnosed with ovarian cancer (OC) in the United States each year and over half that number succumb to this disease annually, often due to recurrent disease. A deeper understanding of the molecular events associated with recurrent disease is needed to identify potential targets. Using genome-scale DNA methylation and gene expression data for 16 matched primary-recurrent advanced stage serous epithelial OCs, we discovered that Claudin-1 (CLDN1), a tight junction protein, shows a stronger correlation between expression and methylation in recurrent versus primary OC at multiple CpG sites (R= –0.47 to −0.64 versus R= -0.32 to −0.57, respectively). An independent dataset showed that this correlation is stronger in tumors from short-term (<3y) survivors than in tumors from long-term (>7y) survivors (R= −0.41 to −0.46 versus R= 0.06 to −0.19, respectively). The presence of this inverse correlation in short-term survivors and recurrent tumors suggests an important role for this relationship and potential predictive value for disease prognosis. CLDN1 expression increased following pharmacologic inhibition of DNA methyltransferase activity (p< 0.001), thus validating the role of methylation in CLDN1 gene inhibition. CLDN1 knockdown enhanced chemosensitivity and suppressed cell proliferation, migration, and wound healing (p< 0.05). Stable CLDN1 knockdown in vivo resulted in reduced xenograft tumor growth but did not reach significance. Our results indicate that the relationship between CLDN1 methylation and expression plays an important role in OC aggressiveness and recurrence.

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