Cancers (May 2023)

Folic Acid Supplementation Promotes Hypomethylation in Both the Inflamed Colonic Mucosa and Colitis-Associated Dysplasia

  • Wen-Chi L. Chang,
  • Jayashri Ghosh,
  • Harry S. Cooper,
  • Lisa Vanderveer,
  • Bryant Schultz,
  • Yan Zhou,
  • Kristen N. Harvey,
  • Esther Kaunga,
  • Karthik Devarajan,
  • Yuesheng Li,
  • Jaroslav Jelinek,
  • Mariana F. Fragoso,
  • Carmen Sapienza,
  • Margie L. Clapper

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15112949
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 11
p. 2949

Abstract

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Purpose: The purpose of this study was to assess the effect of folic acid (FA) supplementation on colitis-associated colorectal cancer (CRC) using the azoxymethane/dextran sulfate sodium (AOM/DSS) model. Methods: Mice were fed a chow containing 2 mg/kg FA at baseline and randomized after the first DSS treatment to receive 0, 2, or 8 mg/kg FA chow for 16 weeks. Colon tissue was collected for histopathological evaluation, genome-wide methylation analyses (Digital Restriction Enzyme Assay of Methylation), and gene expression profiling (RNA-Seq). Results: A dose-dependent increase in the multiplicity of colonic dysplasias was observed, with the multiplicity of total and polypoid dysplasias higher (64% and 225%, respectively) in the 8 mg FA vs. the 0 mg FA group (p p < 0.05), irrespective of FA treatment. The colonic mucosa of the 8 mg FA group was markedly hypomethylated as compared to the 0 mg FA group. Differential methylation of genes involved in Wnt/β-catenin and MAPK signaling resulted in corresponding alterations in gene expression within the colonic mucosa. Conclusions: High-dose FA created an altered epigenetic field effect within the non-neoplastic colonic mucosa. The observed decrease in site-specific DNA methylation altered oncogenic pathways and promoted colitis-associated CRC.

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