PMID: 19148482Jan 17, 2009Paper

Epigenetic silencing of the endothelin-B receptor gene in non-small cell lung cancer.

International Journal of Oncology
Lucy J KnightTriantafillos Liloglou

Abstract

Endothelin-1 is overexpressed in several tumor types. Activation of the endothelin-A (ETA) receptor may promote cell growth, angiogenesis and invasion, and inhibits the apoptotic process, while activation of the endothelin-B (ETB) receptor may induce cell death by apoptosis and inhibit tumor progression. Hypermethylation and subsequent silencing of the ETB receptor gene promoter has been reported in some cancer types. As the endothelin pathway is subject to research for pharmacological cancer treatment, we investigated the extent of epigenetic deregulation of the ETB receptor gene in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). We scanned 64 NSCLC paired tumor/normal surgical specimens for the ETB receptor promoter for methylation by developing four pyrosequencing assays that covered 24 CpGs. The ETB receptor promoter was significantly hypermethylated in 31 (48%) of tumor samples, presenting considerably higher methylation in 22/24 CpG sites compared with the normal counterpart tissues. ETB receptor mRNA levels were reduced in all lung tumors compared with normal adjacent lung tissue, indicating the potentially important involvement of this gene in lung cancer development. Furthermore, tumor samples with ETB receptor gene methylation te...Continue Reading

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