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The American Journal of Pathology - The DNA Methylomes of Serous Borderline Tumors Reveal Subgroups With Malignant- or Benign-Like Profiles
Serous
borderline tumors (SBOTs) are a challenging group of ovarian tumors
positioned between benign and malignant disease. We have profiled the
DNA methylomes of 12 low-grade serous carcinomas (LGSCs), 19 SBOTs, and
16 benign serous tumors (BSTs) across 27,578 CpG sites to further
characterize the epigenomic relationship between these subtypes of
ovarian tumors. Unsupervised hierarchical clustering of DNA methylation
levels showed that LGSCs differ distinctly from BSTs, but not from
SBOTs. Gene ontology analysis of genes showing differential methylation
at linked CpG sites between LGSCs and BSTs revealed significant
enrichment of gene groups associated with cell adhesion, cell-cell
signaling, and the extracellular region, consistent with a more invasive
phenotype of LGSCs compared with BSTs. Consensus clustering highlighted
differences between SBOT methylomes and returned subgroups with
malignant- or benign-like methylation profiles. Furthermore, a two-loci
DNA methylation signature can distinguish between these SBOT subgroups
with benign- and malignant-like methylation characteristics. Our
findings indicate striking similarities between SBOT and LGSC
methylomes, supporting a common origin and the view that LGSC may arise
from SBOT. A subgroup of SBOTs can be classified into tumors with a
benign- or a malignant-like methylation profile that may help in
identifying tumors more likely to progress into LGSCs.
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