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Epigenetic modification is involved in aberrant expression of class III β-tubulin, TUBB3, in ovarian cancer cells

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Aberrant expression of class III β-tubulin, TUBB3, has been reported to be one of the important mechanisms responsible for taxane resistance in diverse human malignancies. We investigated aberrant TUBB3 expression and its epigenetic modification in 66 primary tumors and 3 cell lines (OVCAR-3, JHOC-5 and JHOC-8) of ovarian cancers. Overexpression of TUBB3 protein was observed in 56 (85%) of the 66 ovarian cancers, and was significantly associated with aggressive tumor behavior (advanced stage, presence of ascites, suboptimal cytoreduction at surgery and presence of lymph node metastasis) (P<0.05). Responses to treatment with a demethylating agent (5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine, 5-Aza-CdR) and a histone deacetylase inhibitor (4-phenylbutyric acid, PBA) differed among the ovarian cancer cell lines. In 2 cell lines with weak expression of TUBB3 protein (OVCAR-3 and JHOC-8), TUBB3 induction was independently induced by treatment with 5-Aza-CdR (JHOC-8) or PBA (OVCAR-3), while neither agent markedly altered TUBB3 mRNA/protein expression in a strongly TUBB3-expressing cell line (JHOC-5). A CpG island within intron 1 was hypermethylated in 1 cell line (JHOC-8) that expressed TUBB3 weakly and required 5-Aza-CdR treatment for gene expression. A CpG island of another cell line showing faint expression of TUBB3 protein (OVCAR-3), in which a significant gain of TUBB3 expression was induced by treatment with PBA but not with 5-Aza-CdR, was hypomethylated, similarly to a cell line (JHOC-5) showing constitutive expression of TUBB3. We evaluated methylation status in this region in 14 primary tumors using methylation-specific PCR, but there was no significant relationship with TUBB3 immunoreactivity. These findings suggest that aberrant expression of TUBB3 protein might be associated with aggressive behavior of ovarian cancers, and that epigenetic modulation (DNA methylation and chromatin acetylation) might be partly involved in TUBB3 expression.

Document Type: Research Article

Affiliations: Department of Pathology, School of Medicine, Iwate Medical University, Morioka, Iwate 020-8505, Japan

Publication date: 01 January 2008

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  • The International Journal of Oncology provides an international forum for the publication of the latest, cutting-edge research in the broad area of oncology and cancer treatment. The journal accepts original high quality works and reviews on all aspects of oncology research including carcinogenesis, metastasis, epidemiology, chemotherapy and viral oncology. Through fair and efficient peer review, the journal is dedicated to publishing top tier research in the field, offering authors rapid publication as well as high standards of copy-editing and production. The International Journal of Oncology is published on a monthly basis in both print and early online.
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