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Changes in DNA methylation patterns are frequently observed in neoplastic cells (Baylin et al, 1998). Both global hypomethylation (Feinberg and Vogelstein, 1983) and CpG-island hypermethylation (Toyota et al, 1999) occur simultaneously in colorectal cancer (CRC); however, there appears to be no relationship between these epigenetic alterations (Bariol et al, 2003). Hypermethylation of CpG islands is associated with transcriptional silencing of tumour suppressor genes including P16(INK4A) (Merlo et al, 1995) and MLH1 (Kane et al, 1997). The term CpG-island methylator phenotype (CIMP+) was proposed several years ago to describe tumours that display frequent and concurrent hypermethylation of multiple CpG islands (Toyota et al, 1999). CIMP+ CRCs show characteristic clinical and pathological features that include origin in the proximal colon, higher frequency in female subjects and poorly differentiated, mucinous histology (Toyota et al, 1999; Hawkins et al, 2002; Van Rijnsoever et al, 2002). Whether these properties arise because of aberrant DNA hypermethylation or as a consequence of the microsatellite instability (MSI+) phenotype found in a high proportion of CIMP+ tumours following methylation-induced transcriptional silencing of MLH1 has been highly contentious (Yamashita et al, 2003; Frigola et al, 2005). However, recent evidence suggests that many of the characteristic features of CIMP+ tumours including poor differentiation, mucinous histology, proximal site and BRAF mutation are found independently of MSI+ status (Whitehall et al, 2002; Kambara et al, 2004; Samowitz et al, 2005a, 2005b). The CIMP+/MSI tumour subgroup has worse prognosis (Ward et al, 2003; Samowitz et al, 2005b), but the overall CIMP+ phenotype may be more responsive to 5-fluorouracil-based chemotherapy (Van Rijnsoever et al, 2003).

The methylation of some CpG islands in the normal colonic mucosa has been shown to increase with age (Issa et al, 1994; Ahuja et al, 1998; Nakagawa et al, 2001). This has led to a proposal by Toyota et al (1999) that methylation of some genes in this tissue is age-related (Type A genes), whereas for other genes the methylation is cancer-specific (Type C genes). Examples of Type A genes include ERα and MYOD and for Type C genes they include P16(INK4A), MLH1 and TIMP3. This classification could be misleading, however, in that age-related differences in methylation levels may be quantitative rather than qualitative. Age-related methylation and subsequent inactivation of tumour suppressor genes has been suggested as a predisposing factor for the increased risk of cancer with age (Issa, 1999).

The factors that regulate both global DNA methylation and site-specific hypermethylation in normal and neoplastic tissues are largely unknown. Age clearly has some influence, with dietary folate intake, alcohol consumption and gender also likely to be important factors (Choi and Mason, 2002; Kim, 2004). Genetic factors could also play a role in determining the level of normal tissue DNA methylation and hence the risk of cancer. Common, functional polymorphisms have been described for several genes involved in methyl group metabolism. Most attention has so far focused on variants of the methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR), thymidylate synthase (TS), methionine synthase (MS), DNA methyltransferase (DNMT3b) and methylenetetrahydrofolate dehydrogenase (MTHFD1) genes (Friso et al, 2002; Paz et al, 2002; Kawakami et al, 2003; Chen et al, 2004; Sharp and Little, 2004). We previously reported the wild-type MTHFR 677C allele to be associated with significantly higher concentrations of two important intracellular folate intermediates compared to 677T homozygous variants in CRC (Kawakami et al, 2003). These folate intermediates were present at almost twice the concentration in CIMP+ compared to CIMP tumours, suggesting that the MTHFR C677T polymorphism could also influence the level of DNA hypermethylation by altering the intracellular methyl donor pool. Work by other groups has implicated this polymorphism in the level of global DNA methylation in normal tissues (Stern et al, 2000; Friso et al, 2002; Paz et al, 2002).

In the present study, we used a quantitative assay to evaluate the methylation level in DNA from normal colonic tissue of eight CpG islands located within gene promoter regions. We were thus able to investigate for possible influences of age, gender and methyl group-related genetic factors on the level of CpG-island methylation. The finding of strong associations between high levels of normal colonic tissue methylation and the presence of CIMP+ tumours suggests that there may be a causal link.

Materials and methods

Tissue samples

Tissue samples from a consecutive series of 199 CRC patients undergoing elective surgery at the Colorectal Unit of the Royal Adelaide Hospital were snap frozen in liquid nitrogen within 20–40 min after resection and stored at −70°C. Patients had been fasted for 24 h prior to surgery. Samples of normal mucosa were taken as far away as possible from the tumour site and were morphologically normal in sections used to evaluate the status of that margin in routine histology. The normal sample was usually the distal resection margin for proximal colon cancers or the proximal resection margin for left colon and rectal cancers. Microsatellite instability status was determined as previously described by screening for instability at nine microsatellite loci that included both mononucleotide (BAT-25, BAT-26, BAT-40) and dinucleotide (D2S123, D10S197, D17S579, D18S34, D5S346, D17S250) repeats (Ruszkiewicz et al, 2002). Tumours showing instability at two or more loci were considered to be MSI+. Tumours showing methylation at two or more of six CpG islands examined (P16(INK4A), MLH1, APC, TIMP3, P14(ARF), DAPK) were classified as CIMP+ (Kawakami et al, 2003). Information on patient age, gender and tumour characteristics (stage, nodal involvement, grade, mucinous histology, infiltrating lymphocytes) were obtained from the pathology report. Ethics approval for this study was received from the Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital Human Research Ethics Committee.

Methylation analysis

Aliquots of normal mucosa and tumour tissue were sent on dry ice to the Kanazawa University School of Medicine for extraction of DNA and quantitative assessment of CpG-island methylation within the promoter regions of ERα, MYOD, MLH1 (distal promoter region), P16(INK4A), TIMP3, P14(ARF), APC and DAPK. This was carried out using the MethyLight assay and oligonucleotide primer sequences described previously (Eads et al, 2001; Ishiguro et al, 2003; Kawakami et al, 2003). Briefly, tumour DNA was converted with sodium bisulphite prior to analysis of methylation using the fluorescence-based, real-time PCR MethyLight assay. The results were analysed to obtain a percentage of methylated reference (PMR) value as described previously (Eads et al, 2001). ERα, MYOD, TIMP3 and DAPK were evaluated for methylation in 188 normal mucosal samples; MLH1, P16(INK4A), p14(ARF) and APC in 100 samples. These were categorised into no methylation (PMR=0), low methylation (PMRmedian value of positive readings) and high methylation (PMR>median value of positive readings).

Genotyping

PCR and PCR-RFLP were used to genotype the 28 bp tandem repeat in the enhancer region of TS and the G/C single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) within the triple repeat allele, respectively (Kawakami and Watanabe, 2003). The HaeIII-digested PCR product sizes were estimated using 3% agarose gels. Genotyping for the MTHFR C677T and A1298C SNPs was carried out using PCR-F-SSCP as described earlier by our laboratory (Grieu et al, 2004). PCR-RFLP was used to genotype for SNPs in the MTHFD1 (G1958A), MS (A919G) and DNMT3b (C46359T) genes using the restriction enzymes MspI (Promega, Sydney), HaeIII (Promega) and AvrII (New England BioLabs, Brisbane), respectively, as described earlier (Paz et al, 2002; Shen et al, 2002; Chen et al, 2004).

Statistical analysis

Statistical analyses were performed using the SPSS software package (Chicago, IL, USA). As methylation levels are not normally distributed, median methylation levels between different groups were compared using the Mann–Whitney U-test, with PMR values treated as continuous variables. Associations between age and methylation were evaluated using linear regression, while associations between methylation levels (categorised as none, low or high as described above) and clinical, pathological and genotypic features were evaluated using χ2 and Fishers' exact test as appropriate. All P-values given are two tailed with P<0.05 taken as statistically significant.

Results

The MethyLight assay (Eads et al, 2001) was used to obtain quantitative estimates for the level of methylation of CpG islands within the ERα, MYOD, P16(INK4A), MLH1, APC, P14(ARF), DAPK and TIMP3 genes in normal colonic mucosa from patients with CRC. Consistent with previous reports (Toyota et al, 1999; Rashid and Issa, 2004), ERα and MYOD showed high methylation levels in this tissue (Table 1). P16(INK4A), MLH1, APC, DAPK and TIMP3 each showed relatively low methylation levels in normal colonic tissue (mean PMR<1), while P14(ARF) methylation could not be detected using the MethyLight assay.

Table 1 DNA methylation level in the normal colonic mucosa of CRC patients

ERα and MYOD methylation in normal colonic tissues increased significantly with patient age (P<0.001 for each; Figure 1). When methylation levels were categorised into none, low or high, patients with high ERα and MLH1 methylation were found to be significantly older than those with no methylation of these genes (Figure 2A). Patients with high P16(INK4A) and DAPK methylation also showed trends for older age. Significantly, more female subjects showed high levels of ERα methylation relative to the no methylation group (Figure 2B), with MYOD methylation showing the same trend. Almost half of the patients with high ERα methylation were female subjects compared to only 21% of those with no methylation of this gene. No associations were seen between the methylation level of any gene investigated and anatomical site of the normal mucosa in the large bowel (results not shown).

Figure 1
figure 1

Methylation levels for ERα and MYOD in the normal mucosa of CRC patients in relation to age at diagnosis. Values were determined by MethyLight assay and are expressed as the percentage of a methylated reference (PMR). Older age was associated with significantly increased methylation of ERα and MYOD (P<0.001).

Figure 2
figure 2

Methylation levels in normal colonic tissue were categorised according to no detectable methylation (PMR=0; open bars), low methylation (PMR median of positive values; light bars) and high methylation (PMR >median of positive values; dark bars). A high level of methylation in normal colon tissue was associated with older age (A) and female gender (B) compared to no detectable methylation. *P<0.1; **P<0.05; ***P<0.01.

Normal colonic tissue from patients with MSI+ and CIMP+ tumours frequently demonstrated high methylation levels, particularly for the P16(INK4A), MLH1, TIMP3 and DAPK genes (Figure 3). High methylation levels of MLH1 were seen in the normal tissue of more than one-third of patients with MSI+ tumours and just over half the patients with CIMP+ tumours. Similar trends were also apparent for ERα, MYOD and APC. In contrast, the absence of detectable methylation for each of the genes examined in normal mucosa was observed in <10% of patients with MSI+ tumours and in <20% of patients with CIMP+ tumours. Of the 44 CIMP+ tumours in this cohort, 28 (64%) were MSI and 16 (36%) were MSI+, thus allowing us to examine the CIMP+/MSI tumour group separately to the CIMP+/MSI+ group. Although the sample sizes were small, we observed higher MLH1 methylation (P=0.05) but lower ERα methylation (P=0.025) in the normal mucosa of patients with CIMP+/MSI+ tumours compared to those with CIMP+/MSI tumours. None of the other genes showed significant differences in methylation level between the two groups.

Figure 3
figure 3

High methylation levels in normal colon tissue were more often associated with the presence of MSI+ (A) and CIMP+ (B) tumours compared to cases with no detectable methylation. *P<0.1; **P<0.05; ***P<0.01; ****P<0.001. No detectable methylation (open bars), low methylation (light bars) and high methylation (dark bars) groups are shown.

We next investigated whether common polymorphisms in the methyl group metabolism genes MS, MTHFR, MTHFD1, DNMT3b and TS were associated with the levels of CpG-island methylation in normal colonic tissue. Only the DNMT3b C46359T variant was consistently associated with altered methylation levels in normal colonic mucosa. Methylation levels of MYOD and MLH1 were both significantly lower in DNMT3b TT homozygous patients compared to the combined CC/CT group of patients (Mann–Whitney U-test, P=0.027 and P=0.013, respectively), with methylation in each of the other genes showing the same trend. For each gene, the highest percentage of DNMT3b TT homozygous genotype was seen in patients who had no detectable methylation in their normal colonic mucosa (Figure 4).

Figure 4
figure 4

Colorectal cancer patients with no detectable methylation in normal colon tissue were more often homozygous for the DNMT3b C46359T variant compared to patients with high levels of methylation. Although not reaching statistical significance, this trend was seen for all seven genes investigated. No detectable methylation (open bars), low methylation (light bars) and high methylation (dark bars) groups are shown. *P<0.1.

Discussion

Type A methylation sites were originally proposed to describe CpG islands that are methylated in normal tissue and whose methylation increases with age, with the best-known examples being ERα and MYOD (Toyota et al, 1999). In contrast, Type C CpG islands were proposed as being methylated exclusively in tumour tissue, with P16(INK4A) and MLH1 suggested as examples. In the present study, we used a quantitative assay to evaluate DNA methylation levels in normal colonic tissue from CRC patients who underwent surgical treatment. As expected, methylation levels for ERα and MYOD in normal colonic mucosa were higher than the other genes evaluated (Table 1) and increased with age (Figure 1). However, we obtained clear evidence that methylation levels for P16(INK4A), MLH1 and DAPK also increased with age in the normal colonic mucosa (Figure 2A). Moreover, although the strongest associations between high methylation levels and female gender were observed for ERα and MYOD, a similar trend was apparent for all other genes investigated with the exception of APC (Figure 2B). These results argue against a simple classification of CpG islands into Type A or Type C and suggest instead that differences in their methylation levels in normal colonic tissue are quantitative rather than qualitative.

The second major finding of this study was that promoter methylation levels in normal colonic mucosa showed no apparent associations with site in the large bowel. This was an unexpected observation because tumour methylation levels for most of the genes examined here are known to be much higher in cancers arising in the proximal colon compared to those from the distal colon or rectum (Toyota et al, 1999; Hawkins et al, 2002; Van Rijnsoever et al, 2002). We caution, however, that additional studies involving more precise sampling of normal colonic mucosa from individuals without cancer are required before concluding that there are no site-related differences in the CpG-island methylation levels of this tissue.

The third major finding of the current study was the presence of relatively high methylation levels in the normal colonic tissues of patients with MSI+ and CIMP+ tumours (Figure 3). This was particularly apparent for P16(INK4A), MLH1, TIMP3 and DAPK but was seen for all genes examined. Elevated MLH1 methylation has previously been reported in the normal gastric epithelia of patients with stomach cancer compared to noncancer individuals (Waki et al, 2002). Increased MGMT methylation in the normal mucosa of patients with colon cancers showing MGMT methylation was also reported recently (Shen et al, 2005). Together, these observations suggest that methylation levels in the normal colonic mucosa could serve as markers of risk for the development of CRC and in particular for the closely related MSI+/CIMP+ subgroup. Longitudinal studies performed on individuals at high risk of developing CIMP+ CRC will be required to test this hypothesis.

Older age and female gender (Figures 1 and 2) are generally associated with higher methylation levels for most CpG islands in normal colonic mucosa. However, it is clear that considerable interindividual variation occurs in the methylation level for this tissue, with some young patients showing relatively high values (Figure 1). Genetic, dietary and environmental factors are therefore also likely to be important in determining CpG-island methylation levels. Dietary information was not available for this patient series and hence could not be investigated. We did, however, investigate several common, functional polymorphisms in genes known to play major roles in methyl group metabolism, with only the DNMT3b C46359T variant found to be associated with methylation levels in normal mucosa (Figure 4). Although the sample size was relatively small, all seven CpG islands investigated in this study showed less methylation in DNMT3b TT homozygous individuals compared to those with the CC/CT genotype. DNMT3b mediates de novo DNA methylation, with the C/T transition polymorphism postulated to increase in vitro transcriptional activity by 30% (Shen et al, 2002). The lower methylation level observed here for DNMT3b TT homozygotes is therefore contrary to expectations and this gene could influence the level of global DNA methylation independently of the hypermethylation of CpG islands in promoter regions. Additional studies performed on large cohorts of noncancer individuals and incorporating dietary information are required to confirm the novel association reported here between DNMT3b genotype and CpG-island methylation levels in normal colonic mucosa.

Although the DNMT3b C46359T variant appears to be associated with CpG-island methylation levels in the normal colonic mucosa (Figure 4), we have not determined whether this polymorphism also confers a risk for the development of CIMP+ CRC. The contribution of genetic factors to the development of CIMP+ is controversial, with some workers reporting an association between family history of CRC and CIMP+ (Frazier et al, 2003; Young et al, 2005), but not others (Ward et al, 2004). Functional polymorphisms in methyl group metabolism and DNA methylation genes are clearly interesting candidates for further study and are currently being investigated in large cohorts of well-defined CIMP+ tumours.

In conclusion, methylation levels for most CpG islands in normal colonic mucosa increase with age and are higher in female subjects. Unlike colorectal tumours, methylation levels in the normal mucosa do not vary according to anatomical site in the large bowel. In addition to age and gender, a common genetic variant in the DNA methyltransferase gene DNMT3b also appears to influence CpG-island methylation levels in normal colonic mucosa. The methylation levels of several genes in normal colonic mucosa were associated with the presence of MSI+ and CIMP+ tumours and could thus serve as molecular-based markers of risk for the development of this CRC subgroup.