Claudin-4 overexpression is associated with epigenetic derepression in gastric carcinoma
- Authors
- Kwon, Mi Jeong; Kim, Seok-Hyung; Jeong, Hae Min; Kim, Sung-Su; Lee, Jae Eun; Gye, Myung Chan; Koh, Sang Seok; Park, Cheol Keun; Shin, Young Kee
- Issue Date
- Apr-2011
- Publisher
- AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
- Citation
- CANCER RESEARCH, v.71
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- CANCER RESEARCH
- Volume
- 71
- URI
- https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/168783
- DOI
- 10.1158/1538-7445.AM2011-101
- ISSN
- 0008-5472
- Abstract
- The tight junction protein claudin-4 is aberrantly up-regulated in gastric cancer, but its clinical significance and the molecular mechanism underlying claudin-4 overexpression in gastric cancer remain unclear. Here, we investigated its roles and epigenetic mechanism regulating CLDN4 expression in gastric cancer. We show that increased membranous expression of claudin-4 in gastric carcinoma is associated with better patient prognosis, whereas cytoplasmic claudin-4 expression didn't show a significant association with prognosis. Consistent with the correlation of increased membranous claudin-4 with favorable clinicopathological factors, claudin-4 overexpression inhibited the migration and invasion of gastric cancer cells; in contrast, it didn't affect cell growth. Claudin-4 expression also increased the barrier function of tight junctions. Claudin-4 up-regulation was strongly correlated with DNA hypomethylation in both gastric tissues and gastric cancer cells. Moreover, loss of repressive histone methylations and gain of active histone modifications were associated with CLDN4 overexpression in gastric cancer cells. Interestingly, CLDN4 repression could be markedly derepressed by combined treatments that simultaneously target both histone modifications and DNA demethylation in CLDN4-hypermethylated cells, whereas concomitant changes in histone methylations and acetylations are required for CLDN4 induction in CLDN4-repressed cells with low DNA methylation. Taken together, this study reveals that membranous claudin-4 expression is associated with gastric cancer progression as well as it is an independent positive prognosis marker in gastric carcinoma. Furthermore, our findings suggest that epigenetic derepression may be a possible mechanism underlying CLDN4 overexpression in gastric cancer and that claudin-4 may have potential as a promising target for the treatment of gastric cancer.
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