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Department
of Experimental Urology (NSV, GJvS, WMvW) and Pathology (THvdK), Josephine
Nefkens Institute, Erasmus University, Rotterdam, and Department of Urology
(MJB), University of Nijmegen, Nijmegen, The Netherlands
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SUMMARY: Loss of the CD44 transmembrane glycoprotein in primary prostate
cancer has been shown to be associated with unfavorable clinical behavior.
Moreover, the majority of prostate cancer metastases lack expression of
this molecule. The mechanism of CD44 silencing in prostate cancer was
investigated using both patient material and in vivo-propagated human
prostate cancer xenografts. In 9 of 11 lymph node metastases of prostate
cancer, we demonstrated by methylation-sensitive restriction enzyme digestion
that the promoter region of the CD44 gene is methylated, indicating
that this represents a major mechanism of CD44 silencing. Similarly, in
6 out of 12 in vivo-growing human prostate carcinoma xenograft models,
hypermethylation of the CD44 gene was found. The extent of CpG
island methylation was investigated by nucleotide sequencing after bisulphite
modification of the CD44 promoter region. In the xenografts displaying
hypermethylation, the examined 14 CpG sites in the CD44 transcription
regulatory domain, including a Sp1 binding site, were consistently methylated.
This correlated with reduced CD44 expression or lack of CD44 expression
at mRNA and protein levels. In the xenografts lacking hypermethylation
of the CD44 gene, high levels of CD44 mRNA and protein were expressed
in some models, whereas in others CD44 mRNA expression was only detectable
by RT-PCR and the CD44 protein could hardly be detected or was not detected
at all. The results indicate that, in most prostate cancers, loss of CD44
expression is associated with extensive hypermethylation of the CpG island
of the CD44 promoter region, but other, posttranscriptional mechanisms
may also lead to CD44 loss.
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