Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume 272, Issue 35, 29 August 1997, Pages 22322-22329
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NUCLEIC ACIDS, PROTEIN SYNTHESIS, AND MOLECULAR GENETICS
Mapping Patterns of CpG Island Methylation in Normal and Neoplastic Cells Implicates Both Upstream and Downstream Regions inde Novo Methylation*

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Promoter region CpG island methylation is associated with tumor suppressor gene silencing in neoplasia. GenBank sequence analyses revealed that a number of CpG islands are juxtaposed to multiple Alu repeats, which have been proposed as “de novo methylation centers.” These islands also contain multiple Sp1 elements located upstream and downstream of transcription start, which have been shown to protect CpG islands from methylation. We mapped the methylation patterns of the E-cadherin(E-cad) and von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) tumor suppressor gene CpG island regions in normal and neoplastic cells. Although unmethylated in normal tissue, these islands were embedded between densely methylated flanking regions containing multiple Alu repeats. These methylated flanks were segregated from the unmethylated, island CpG sites by Sp1-rich boundary regions. Finally, in human fibroblasts overexpressing DNA methyltransferase, de novomethylation of the E-cad CpG island initially involved sequences at both ends of the island and the adjacent, flanking regions and progressed with time to encompass the entire CpG island region. Together, these data suggest that boundaries exist at both ends of a CpG island to maintain the unmethylated state in normal tissue and that these boundaries may be progressively overridden, eliciting thede novo methylation associated with tumor suppressor gene silencing in neoplasia.

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*

This work was supported in part by National Institutes of Health Grant CA43318.The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

Recipient of an award from the Academy of Finland.

**

Current address: Dept. of Radiation Oncology, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA 30335.