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Aberrant DNA Methylation, Expression, and Occurrence of Transcript Variants of the ABC Transporter ABCA7 in Breast Cancer.

Katja ZappeAntonio KopicAlexandra ScheichelAnn-Katrin SchierLukas Emanuel SchmidtYasmin BorutzkiHeidi MiedlMartin SchreiberTheresa MendrinaChristine PirkerGeorg PfeilerStefan HackerWerner HaslikDietmar PilsAndrea BileckChristopher GernerSamuel M Meier-MenchesPetra HeffeterMargit Cichna-Markl
Published in: Cells (2023)
The ABC transporter ABCA7 has been found to be aberrantly expressed in a variety of cancer types, including breast cancer. We searched for specific epigenetic and genetic alterations and alternative splicing variants of ABCA7 in breast cancer and investigated whether these alterations are associated with ABCA7 expression. By analyzing tumor tissues from breast cancer patients, we found CpGs at the exon 5-intron 5 boundary aberrantly methylated in a molecular subtype-specific manner. The detection of altered DNA methylation in tumor-adjacent tissues suggests epigenetic field cancerization. In breast cancer cell lines, DNA methylation levels of CpGs in promoter-exon 1, intron 1, and at the exon 5-intron 5 boundary were not correlated with ABCA7 mRNA levels. By qPCR involving intron-specific and intron-flanking primers, we identified intron-containing ABCA7 mRNA transcripts. The occurrence of intron-containing transcripts was neither molecular subtype-specific nor directly correlated with DNA methylation at the respective exon-intron boundaries. Treatment of breast cancer cell lines MCF-7, BT-474, SK-BR3, and MDA-MB-231 with doxorubicin or paclitaxel for 72 h resulted in altered ABCA7 intron levels. Shotgun proteomics revealed that an increase in intron-containing transcripts was associated with significant dysregulation of splicing factors linked to alternative splicing.
Keyphrases
  • dna methylation
  • gene expression
  • genome wide
  • copy number
  • risk assessment
  • poor prognosis
  • squamous cell carcinoma
  • mass spectrometry
  • binding protein
  • single cell
  • cell proliferation
  • breast cancer cells
  • single molecule