Hypermethylation of HIC-1 and 17p Allelic Loss in Medulloblastoma

2002 
Medulloblastoma is the most common malignant brain tumor in children.Chromosome arm 17p13.3 is reduced to homozygosity in 35–50% of medulloblastomas,making it the most frequent genetic alteration in these tumors. HIC-1 (hypermethylated in cancer) is a putative tumor suppressor gene located in the area of common deletion. HIC-1 resides in a CpG island and is hypermethylated in many different tumor types. Therefore, we studied a series of tumor specimens for hypermethylation and deletion of the region containing the HIC-1 gene to determine whether these two mechanisms of gene inactivation play a complimentary role in medulloblastoma. Southern blotting was performed using the methylation-sensitive restriction endonuclease Not I. Methylation of Not I restriction sites located in HIC-1 was demonstrated in 26 (72%) of 36 tumors and 11 (92%) of 12 specimens of normal brain. Of these 26 tumors, 23 differed significantly from normal brain. A greater proportion of the cells from the tumors showed methylated alleles of the HIC-1 gene. A group of 15 (42%) of 36 tumors exhibited loss of heterozygosity (LOH) for DNA sequences located on chromosome arm 17p. There was no significant correlation between LOH and methylation status ( P = 0.19). Methylation in tumors beyond that seen in normal brain predicted poor overall survival independent of clinical risk category ( P = 0.014). The results of our study show that methylation of the CpG island that contains the HIC-1 gene is common in medulloblastoma and, together with LOH of 17p, may be a critical event in the formation and aggressiveness of this tumor.
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