Histone-Related Genes Are Hypermethylated in Lung Cancer and Hypermethylated HIST1H4F Could Serve as a Pan-Cancer Biomarker

S Dong, W Li, L Wang, J Hu, Y Song, B Zhang, X Ren… - Cancer Research, 2019 - AACR
S Dong, W Li, L Wang, J Hu, Y Song, B Zhang, X Ren, S Ji, J Li, P Xu, Y Liang, G Chen…
Cancer Research, 2019AACR
Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide. Cytologic
examination is the current “gold standard” for lung cancer diagnosis, however, this has low
sensitivity. Here, we identified a typical methylation signature of histone genes in lung
cancer by whole-genome DNA methylation analysis, which was validated by The Cancer
Genome Atlas (TCGA) lung cancer cohort (n= 907) and was further confirmed in 265
bronchoalveolar lavage fluid samples with specificity and sensitivity of 96.7% and 87.0 …
Abstract
Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide. Cytologic examination is the current “gold standard” for lung cancer diagnosis, however, this has low sensitivity. Here, we identified a typical methylation signature of histone genes in lung cancer by whole-genome DNA methylation analysis, which was validated by The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) lung cancer cohort (n = 907) and was further confirmed in 265 bronchoalveolar lavage fluid samples with specificity and sensitivity of 96.7% and 87.0%, respectively. More importantly, HIST1H4F was universally hypermethylated in all 17 tumor types from TCGA datasets (n = 7,344), which was further validated in nine different types of cancer (n = 243). These results demonstrate that HIST1H4F can function as a universal-cancer-only methylation (UCOM) marker, which may aid in understanding general tumorigenesis and improve screening for early cancer diagnosis.
Significance
These findings identify a new biomarker for cancer detection and show that hypermethylation of histone-related genes seems to persist across cancers.
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