Alʹmanah Kliničeskoj Mediciny (Sep 2024)

The group of hypermethylated long noncoding RNA genes is associated with different types of metastasis in ovarian cancer

  • Alexey M. Burdenny,
  • Svetlana S. Lukina,
  • Elena A. Filippova,
  • Natalya A. Ivanova,
  • Irina V. Pronina,
  • Vitaly I. Loginov,
  • Tatyana P. Kazubskaya,
  • Dmitry N. Kushlinsky,
  • Dmitry A. Tsekatunov,
  • Kirill I. Zhordania,
  • Eleonora A. Braga

DOI
https://doi.org/10.18786/2072-0505-2024-52-021
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 52, no. 3
pp. 149 – 161

Abstract

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Background: Ovarian tumors are characterized by asymptomatic progression until their late stages, when at the time of diagnosis the patient already has extensive metastatic disease. In addition to lymphogenous and hematogenous metastasis in ovarian cancer, there are peritoneal dissemination and metastasis to the greater omentum with ascites; moreover, peritoneal carcinomatosis is the predominant route of metastasizing of ovarian cancer. Epigenetic factors, such as gene methylation, regulatory microRNAs and long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs), contribute to progression of this cancer. Our previous bioinformatic and experimental studies have identified 13 genes of lncRNAs (GAS5, HOTAIR, LINC00472, LINC00886, MAFG-DT, PLUT/PDX1-AS1, SNHG1, SNHG6, SNHG12, SNHG17, TINCR, TP53TG1, TUG1) hypermethylated in the ovarian neoplasms. Aim: To evaluate the clinical significance of methylation levels of 13 lncRNA genes (GAS5, HOTAIR, LINC00472, LINC00886, MAFG-DT, PLUT/PDX1-AS1, SNHG1, SNHG6, SNHG12, SNHG17, TINCR, TP53TG1, TUG1) associated with various types of ovarian cancer metastasis, including lymphogenous, peritoneal, omental, and distant metastases. Methods: The methylation levels of lncRNA genes GAS5, HOTAIR, LINC00472, LINC00886, MAFG-DT, PLUT/PDX1-AS1, SNHG1, SNHG6, SNHG12, SNHG17, TINCR, TP53TG1, TUG1 were analyzed by quantitative real-time methylation-specific polymerase chain reaction. We tested 122 duplicate samples of ovarian neoplasms, including 104 malignancies and 18 borderline tumors, as well as 45 peritoneal macro metastases, collected in the N.N. Blokhin National Medical Research Center of Oncology in 2020 to 2023. The study included 21 samples of primary tumor from patients with lymphogenous metastases, 45 samples from patients with peritoneal dissemination, 61 from those with omental metastases, 49 from patients with ascites, and 9 with distant metastases. Results: The tumor samples from the patients with lymphatic nodes metastases showed a significant increase in the methylation level of two lncRNA genes: SNHG6 (p = 0.044) and SNHG12 (p = 0.006). Peritoneal dissemination was associated with hypermethylation of four lncRNA genes: GAS5, HOTAIR, LINC00472 (p 0.05), and most significantly TINCR (p = 0.001). GAS5, HOTAIR, LINC00886 (p 0.05) and most significantly LINC00472 (p 0.001) hypermethylation was typical for omental metastasis, and that of LINC00472 and LINC00886, with ascites (p 0.05). Peritoneal macroscopic metastases demonstrated increased methylation of MAFG-DT (p 0.001) and TP53TG1 (p 0.001) and desmethylation of LINC00886 (p = 0.003) and SNHG12 (p = 0.002), compared to their primary tumors. Conclusion: We performed the analysis of clinical significance of 13 hypermethylated lncRNA genes in ovarian cancer and were the first to show that 10 genes (GAS5, HOTAIR, LINC00472, LINC00886, MAFG-DT, SNHG6, SNHG12, TINCR, TP53TG1, TUG1) were associated with various types of ovarian tumor metastasis. Also, we were able to determine certain panels of lncRNA, which, if demonstrate abnormal methylation, were specific for lymphogenous and peritoneal metastasis of ovarian tumors.

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