Age-dependent DNA methylation of genes that are suppressed in stem cells is a hallmark of cancer
University College London · University College Hospital · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Polycomb group proteins (PCGs) are involved in repression of genes that are required for stem cell differentiation. Recently, it was shown that promoters of PCG target genes (PCGTs) are 12-fold more likely to be methylated in cancer than non-PCGTs. Age is the most important demographic risk factor for cancer, and we hypothesized that its carcinogenic potential may be referred by irreversibly stabilizing stem cell features. To test this, we analyzed the methylation status of over 27,000 CpGs mapping to promoters of approximately 14,000 genes in whole blood samples from 261 postmenopausal women. We demonstrate that stem cell PCGTs are far more likely to become methylated with age than non-targets (odds ratio =…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- —
- Percentile
- —
- References
- 43
Authors
21- AEAndrew E. TeschendorffCorresponding
University College London
- UMUsha Menon
University College Hospital, University College London
- AGAleksandra Gentry‐Maharaj
University College Hospital, University College London
- SJSusan J. Ramus
University College Hospital, University College London
- DJDaniel J. Weisenberger
University of Southern California
Topics & keywords
- Biology
- DNA methylation
- Epigenetics
- Carcinogenesis
- Stem cell
- Methylation
- Cancer stem cell
- Cancer
- Good health and well-being