Validation of SCT methylation as a hallmark biomarker for lung cancers

Yu An Zhang, Xiaotu Ma, Adwait Sathe, Junya Fujimoto, Ignacio I. Wistuba, Stephen Lam, Yasushi Yatabe, Yi Wei Wang, Victor Stastny, Boning Gao, Jill E. Larsen, Luc Girard, Xiaoyun Liu, Kai Song, Carmen Behrens, Neda Kalhor, Yang Xie, Michael Q. Zhang, John D. Minna, Adi F. Gazdar

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

11 Scopus citations

Abstract

Introduction: The human secretin gene (SCT) encodes secretin, a hormone with limited tissue distribution. Analysis of the 450k methylation array data in The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) indicated that the SCT promoter region is differentially hypermethylated in lung cancer. Our purpose was to validate SCT methylation as a potential biomarker for lung cancer. Methods: We analyzed data from TCGA and developed and applied SCT-specific bisulfite DNA sequencing and quantitative methylation-specific polymerase chain reaction assays. Results: The analyses of TCGA 450K data for 801 samples showed that SCT hypermethylation has an area under the curve (AUC) value greater than 0.98 that can be used to distinguish lung adenocarcinomas or squamous cell carcinomas from nonmalignant lung tissue. Bisulfite sequencing of lung cancer cell lines and normal blood cells allowed us to confirm that SCT methylation is highly discriminative. By applying a quantitative methylation-specific polymerase chain reaction assay, we found that SCT hypermethylation is frequently detected in all major subtypes of malignant non- small cell lung cancer (AUC = 0.92, n = 108) and small cell lung cancer (AUC = 0.93, n = 40) but is less frequent in lung carcinoids (AUC = 0.54, n = 20). SCT hypermethylation appeared in samples of lung carcinoma in situ during multistage pathogenesis and increased in invasive samples. Further analyses of TCGA 450k data showed that SCT hypermethylation is highly discriminative in most other types of malignant tumors but less frequent in low-grade malignant tumors. The only normal tissue with a high level of methylation was the placenta. Conclusions: Our findings demonstrated that SCT methylation is a highly discriminative biomarker for lung and other malignant tumors, is less frequent in low-grade malignant tumors (including lung carcinoids), and appears at the carcinoma in situ stage.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)346-360
Number of pages15
JournalJournal of Thoracic Oncology
Volume11
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 23 2016

Keywords

  • Cancer biomarker
  • FFPE DNA SCT qMSP
  • Lung cancer
  • SCT methylation
  • Secretin

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Oncology
  • Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine

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