KISS1 methylation and expression as predictors of disease progression in colorectal cancer patients.
Chen. Shao-Qin SQ; Chen. Zhi-Hua ZH; Lin. Su-Yong SY; Dai. Qi-Bao QB; Fu. Leng-Xi LX; Chen. Rui-Qing RQ
Key Findings
- KISS1 promoter is hypermethylated in 83% of colorectal cancer samples but rarely in normal tissue.
- Higher KISS1 methylation is linked to poorer tumor differentiation, deeper invasion, and more metastasis.
- Treating cancer cells with the demethylating agent 5‑Aza‑CdR re‑activates KISS1 expression and reduces cell migration and invasion.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this study shows that KISS1 activity can be suppressed by DNA methylation, but restoring it requires a powerful chemotherapy drug (5‑Aza‑CdR) that isn’t safe for self‑use. The findings are interesting for understanding cancer epigenetics, yet they don’t provide a practical, safe protocol for longevity or performance enhancement.
Summary
Researchers found that the gene for kisspeptin (KISS1) is often turned off in colon cancer because its DNA gets a chemical tag called methylation. When they used a drug that removes these tags, the gene turned back on and cancer cells moved less, hinting that the gene helps keep tumors from spreading.
Abstract
To examine the effect of aberrant methylation of the KISS1 promoter on the development of colorectal cancer (CRC) and to investigate reversing aberrant methylation of the KISS1 promoter as a potential therapeutic target. KISS1 promoter methylation, mRNA expression and protein expression were detected by methylation-specific polymerase chain reaction (PCR), real-time quantitative PCR and Western blotting, respectively, in 126 CRC tissues and 142 normal colorectal tissues. Human CRC cells with KISS1 promoter hypermethylation and poor KISS1 expression were treated in vitro with 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine (5-Aza-CdR). After treatment, KISS1 promoter methylation, KISS1 mRNA and protein expression and cell migration and invasion were evaluated. Hypermethylation of KISS1 occurred frequently in CRC samples (83.1%, 105/126), but was infrequent in normal colorectal tissues (6.34%, 9/142). Moreover, KISS1 methylation was associated with tumor differentiation, the depth of invasion, lymph node metastasis and distant metastasis (P < 0.001). KISS1 methylation was also associated with low KISS1 expression (P < 0.001). Furthermore, we observed re-expression of the KISS1 gene and decreased cell migration after 5-Aza-CdR treatment in a CRC cell line. These data suggest that KISS1 is down-regulated in cancer tissues via promoter hypermethylation and therefore may represent a candidate target for treating metastatic CRC.
Study Information
pubmed
2014
2014-08-07T00:00:00.000Z
10.3748/wjg.v20.i29.10071
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