Methylation of estrogen receptor β promoter correlates with loss of ER-β expression in mammary carcinoma and is an early indication marker in premalignant lesions

A. Rody, U. Holtrich, C. Solbach, K. Kourtis, G. v. Minckwitz, K. Engels, S. Kissler, R. Gätje, T. Karn*, M. Kaufmann

*Corresponding author for this work
66 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The function of estrogen receptor beta (ER-β) in mammary tissue is not completely understood. While early observations were often conflicting, more recent data suggest an important role as a tumor-suppressor gene. A decrease of ER-β expression has been observed in ductal carcinoma in situ and invasive carcinoma as compared with benign mammary epithelial cells. The loss of ER-β resulted in abnormal growth of mammary epithelial cells. We have previously shown that the mRNA expression of the ER-β gene is almost totally suppressed in breast carcinomas from patients with a poor prognosis. Here we analyzed whether methylation changes in the different promoters of ER-β are responsible for the loss of expression of the gene. A methylation assay with high specificity and sensitivity was developed, and a panel of breast tissue samples (n = 175) was characterized for methylation status. In contrast to benign breast, more than two-thirds of invasive breast cancers showed a high degree of methylation. Importantly, increased methylation was also detectable in numerous premalignant lesions. By analysis of breast tumors, previously characterized by gene-expression profiling, methylation was predominantly detected in a subgroup of patients with an unfavorable prognosis, suggesting a possible prognostic value of the ER-β methylation status. We also investigated the structural characteristics of the two ER-β promoters, which were both found to be closely associated with a second, downstream, localized and opposite-oriented promoter. However, we could not detect endogenous antisense RNA transcribed from these promoters, which may be involved in epigenetic gene silencing. We also failed to induce ER-β promoter methylation by expressing siRNAs in cell lines. Interestingly, by comparing the promoter sequences of ER-β with other genes known to be epigenetically inactivated in breast cancers, we identified a sequence motif possibly involved in promoter methylation.

Original languageEnglish
JournalEndocrine-Related Cancer
Volume12
Issue number4
Pages (from-to)903-916
Number of pages14
ISSN1351-0088
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 12.2005

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