Journal article

Frequent epigenetic inactivation of RASSF2 in thyroid cancer and functional consequences


Authors listSchagdarsurengin, U;Richter, AM; Hornung, J; Lange, C; Steinmann, K; Dammann, RH

Publication year2010

JournalMolecular Cancer

Volume number9

ISSN1476-4598

eISSN1476-4598

Open access statusGold

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1186/1476-4598-9-264

PublisherBioMed Central


Abstract

Background: The Ras association domain family (RASSF) encodes for distinct tumor suppressors and several members are frequently silenced in human cancer. In our study, we analyzed the role of RASSF2, RASSF3, RASSF4, RASSF5A, RASSF5C and RASSF6 and the effectors MST1, MST2 and WW45 in thyroid carcinogenesis. Results: Frequent methylation of the RASSF2 and RASSF5A CpG island promoters in thyroid tumors was observed. RASSF2 was methylated in 88% of thyroid cancer cell lines and in 63% of primary thyroid carcinomas. RASSF2 methylation was significantly increased in primary thyroid carcinoma compared to normal thyroid, goiter and follicular adenoma (0%, 17% and 0%, respectively; p < 0.05). Patients which were older than 60 years were significantly hypermethylated for RASSF2 in their primary thyroid tumors compared to those younger than 40 years (90% vs. 38%; p < 0.05). RASSF2 promoter hypermethylation correlated with its reduced expression and treatment with a DNA methylation inhibitor reactivated RASSF2 transcription. Over-expression of RASSF2 reduced colony formation of thyroid cancer cells. Functionally our data show that RASSF2 interacts with the proapoptotic kinases MST1 and MST2 and induces apoptosis in thyroid cancer cell lines. Deletion of the MST interaction domain of RASSF2 reduced apoptosis significantly (p < 0.05). Conclusion: These results suggest that RASSF2 encodes a novel epigenetically inactivated candidate tumor suppressor gene in thyroid carcinogenesis.




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleSchagdarsurengin, U., Richter, A., Hornung, J., Lange, C., Steinmann, K. and Dammann, R. (2010) Frequent epigenetic inactivation of RASSF2 in thyroid cancer and functional consequences, Molecular Cancer, 9, Article 264. https://doi.org/10.1186/1476-4598-9-264

APA Citation styleSchagdarsurengin, U., Richter, A., Hornung, J., Lange, C., Steinmann, K., & Dammann, R. (2010). Frequent epigenetic inactivation of RASSF2 in thyroid cancer and functional consequences. Molecular Cancer. 9, Article 264. https://doi.org/10.1186/1476-4598-9-264


Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 09:56