The hypermethylated status of the promoter regions of p16INK4a, RASSF1A, E cadherin, and GSTP1 was observed in 10 (40%), 14 (56%), 6 (24%), and 12 (48%) of 25 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma, respectively.
These data indicate that the epigenetic aberrance of promoter CpG island hypermethylation of the GSTP1 gene may contribute to the hepatopathogenesis of HCC and is a potential valuable biomarker for noninvasive disease monitoring and HCC early diagnosis.
GSTP1 is a largely investigated tissue biomarker in several malignancies such as prostate, breast, lung and hepatocellular carcinoma with good performances especially for diagnostic purposes.
Further analyses using methylation-specific PCR, combined with expression analysis, in the validation set of primary HCC showed that, in addition to three known tumor-suppressor genes (APC, CDKN2A, and GSTP1), eight genes (AKR1B1, GRASP, MAP9, NXPE3, RSPH9, SPINT2, STEAP4, and ZNF154) were significantly hypermethylated and downregulated in the HCC tumors compared to the non-tumor liver tissues.
Importantly, our analysis revealed an association between alcohol intake and the hypomethylation of MGMT and between hypermethylation of GSTP1 and HBV infection, indicating that hypermethylation of the genes analyzed in HCC tumors exhibits remarkably distinct patterns depending on associated risk factors.
Compared with normal liver tissue and cirrhosis, the pooled ORs of GSTP1 promoter region methylation in HBV-related HCC cancer tissues were 6.05 (95% CI =1.20-30.52) and 5.21 (95% CI =2.19-12.41), respectively.
Under abnormal conditions the excessive reactive oxygen species generation results in genetic predisposition of various genes (as ADH, ALDH, CYP2E1, GSTT1, GSTP1 and GSTM1) involved in xenobiotic metabolic pathways, associated with susceptibility to different liver related diseases such as fibrosis, cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma.
We conclude that the studied polymorphisms affecting GSTP1, GSTA1 and GSTM3 genes are probably not related to the risk of developing hepatocellular carcinoma in the studied population.
Moreover, the effects of OCPs exposure on HCC risk are more pronounced amongst GSTP1 (Ile/Val + Val/Val) and GSTP1 promoter methylation subjects than those who were GSTP1 (Ile/Ile) and unmethylated subjects.
In contrast, levels of transcript were significantly elevated (up to 16-fold) in total RNA derived from bladder and ureteric carcinomas, with the highest levels of elevation approaching those previously found only for the GST-P gene in experimentally induced rodent hepatocellular carcinomas.
Two SNPs (GSTO2: rs7085725 and GSTP1: rs4147581) were significantly associated with overall survival in HCC patients (P = 0.035 and 0.042, respectively).