The unusual suspect
Cancer researchers look beyond the genome
to the epigenome—and the role of methyl marks
More than 10,000 people in the U. S. will die of kidney
cancer in 2007, the American Cancer Society predicts.
And often, it won’t be genes gone bad that get them.
Scientists have known for decades that cancer can be caused by genetic
mutations. But they’ve recently discovered another culprit—the
tiny methyl group, which consists of a single carbon atom surrounded
by hydrogen atoms. When this chemical group shows up in the wrong places
on an otherwise normal strand of DNA, it can cause cancer.

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In one breed of mice, intestinal tumors form in two distinct stages, which
are partially regulated by epigenetic events, including misplaced methyl
groups. First, microscopic tumors, such as the one in the center of the
top image, develop. Given the right circumstances, these growths progress
into macroscopic tumors (bottom).
Photos: Yasuhiro Yamada
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In 1994, two groups showed that about 57 percent of patients with the
most common form of kidney cancer harbor a mutation on the von Hippel-Lindau
(VHL) tumor-suppressor gene. This finding led some doctors to wonder
about the remaining 43 percent—how do they arise?
Stephen Baylin, professor of oncology at the Johns Hopkins University,
and his colleague James Herman, now an associate professor at the same institution, decided
to delve deeper into this medical mystery by taking a closer look at
the VHL gene in patients with the non-hereditary form of this cancer.
His lab uncovered an interesting pattern. In roughly 20 percent of the
tumors, the DNA bases forming the VHL promoter (the region where proteins
bind to activate the gene) have acquired extra methyl groups. However,
the sequence of the DNA bases in the whole VHL gene is usually normal,
indicating that the gene has not suffered a mutation. Baylin and his
colleagues hypothesized that the extra methyl miscreants were guilty
of shutting down the otherwise normal gene. Scientists had already shown
that methyl groups block access to DNA, preventing it from being read
out, so this was a logical conclusion.
Although Baylin was hardly the first scientist to observe odd methylation
patterns in the DNA of tumors, he was among the first to produce evidence
that this might play a major role in cancer formation. A deluge of papers
came out around that time, including a key one by Whitehead Member Rudolf
Jaenisch, providing irrefutable proof that misplaced methyl marks can
contribute to cancer formation.
“I think the VHL gene was precociously trying to tell us something,” Baylin
says. “If you find a gene that has lost its function via a mutation,
then you can probably find cases where that gene has lost its function
via a modification to the epigenome.”
Marking up DNA—and passing it on
So what’s the epigenome?
You can think of it as the system that lets each type of cell access
parts of the genome for its own particular needs.
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Strategically placed methyl groups (shown in red) block access to key
regions of DNA, keeping specific genes silent. There are two known types
of epigenetic marks—methyl groups and DNA-packaging proteins. To
see how methyl groups work on one gene, see Whiteboard (0.2
mb pdf or 6.8
mb jpg).
Illustration: Christina Ullman
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The epigenome serves as a firewall, hiding certain genes while exposing
others. For example, a few methyl groups on the promoter of a gene can
keep it concealed and silent in a particular tissue. Though methyl marks
are the best understood epigenetic marks, there’s another major
group—packaging proteins. For example, some proteins block access
to genes by coiling bits of the sequence into neat “spools.”
Epigenetic mechanisms usually help cells express genes at the right
time and place. While all of an organism’s cells share the same
genes, epigenetics ensures that a brain cell produces dopamine, serotonin
and other “brain” chemicals rather than keratin, fats and
oils, which are characteristic of a skin cell. At least 200 different
types of cells comprise a human being, and each one contains a different
epigenome.
Given their essential functions, epigenetic marks hardly serve as DNA
accessories. But they can be changed like a pair of earrings or a necklace.
For example, an enzyme called Dnmt3a places methyl marks on previously
unmethylated DNA. Typically active in developing embryos, this enzyme
helps to establish tissue-specific DNA methylation patterns.
Importantly, such marks are replicated during cell division and passed
to daughter cells. Thus epigenetic marks are transient in one sense,
yet heritable in another.
“This dichotomy is one of the reasons we’re studying epigenetics
as it relates to cancer,” says Heinz Linhart, an MD/PhD in Jaenisch’s
lab. “Epigenetic marks provide potent therapeutic targets because
they can be added or stripped, but we wouldn’t be talking about
them if they weren’t heritable. Neither mutations nor misplaced
methyl marks would induce tumors if they were diluted out when cells
divided.”
Linhart manipulates the epigenomes of mice to explore methylation patterns
previously linked to tumor formation. He tinkers with methyl marks and
watches the results—an approach that allows him to establish cause
and effect.
Jaenisch used a similar approach more than 10 years ago to silence critics
of the first studies that provided evidence that epigenetic changes can
produce tumors.
Tale of a tumor
In 1994, the same year Baylin completed his kidney cancer study, Jaenisch
began to study methylation in tumor-prone mice. Though healthy in most
respects, these animals develop large numbers of tumors in their intestines.
Ironically, Jaenisch suspected that missing methyl groups might be to
blame. Around 1980, scientists had noticed that the DNA of many tumor
cells was missing methyl marks, but they didn’t have the tools
to probe the relationship. Furthermore, renowned cancer researcher Bert
Vogelstein of Johns Hopkins had observed this “hypomethylation” pattern
in the tumor-prone mice and proposed that it was a prerequisite for polyp
formation.
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Eva Moran and Heinz Linhart manipulate mice epigenomes by tinkering with
methyl marks, and then see how that affects tumor formation.
Photo: Kim Furnald
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In collaboration with Whitehead Member Robert
Weinberg, Jaenisch and
postdoctoral researcher Peter Laird (now a professor at the University
of Southern California) stripped methyl groups from the DNA of their
pint-sized subjects and waited for the animals to develop tons of tumors.
The results, published in Cell in 1995, were startling.
Rather than mimicking tumor formation, these mice produced fewer tumors. “Though
we were puzzled by the outcome, we were pleased to establish a causal
relationship between methylation and cancer,” says Jaenisch, who
also is a biology professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
A decade later, Japanese pathologist Yasuhiro Yamada joined the lab.
Yamada was particularly knowledgeable about the mice
used in the experiment. He knew that their intestinal
tumors developed in two distinct stages. First come microscopic tumors
that resemble flowers. Given the right conditions, these grow into massive
irregular tumors that can be seen with the naked eye.
Yamada repeated the 1995 study and discovered that hypomethylation increases
the number of tiny tumors but decreases the number of large tumors. The
earlier researchers missed the microscopic effect.
“Our lab had just shown that global hypomethylation destabilizes
DNA big time, so we reasoned that the small tumors result from chromosomal
instability rather than epigenetic silencing,” Jaenisch explains.
Linhart and MIT diploma student Eva Moran took the study one step further
by setting new methyl marks randomly on the DNA of the tumor-prone mice—a
gain-of-function study as opposed to the many loss-of-function studies
done previously.
In most tumor cells, DNA is unusually short on methyl groups. Yet the
same cells often contain short sequences replete with methyl groups,
hot spots that typically fall on the regulatory regions of genes. After
Linhart and Moran methylated these hot spots, the mice developed more
macroscopic intestinal tumors than usual.
The pair dug deeper and identified a key growth-control gene affected
by the misplaced methyl groups. Their findings, which should be published
this spring, provide an interesting twist to the intestinal-tumor tale.
“In these mice, intestinal tumors arise through a complex interplay
between genetic events, global hypomethylation and local hypermethylation,” says
Linhart, who is still teasing apart the details of this relationship.
The story of the intestinal tumor demonstrates once again that cancer
is rarely simple. The term encompasses a multitude of diseases characterized
by the abnormal proliferation of cells. Each of these diseases has its
own story filled with its own characters, ranging from genes to viruses
to methyl groups.
“Epigenetics will not provide a universal cure for cancer because
it does not cause every instance of the ‘disease,’” says
Linhart. In fact, it might offer more promise as a diagnostic tool. A
growing body of evidence suggests that most tumors exhibit epigenetic
changes regardless of their origin. So epigenetic patterns could be used
to diagnose particular types of cancer, even those caused by genetic
mutations. But scientists caution against losing sight of the big picture.
“Although methylation changes can be just as important as mutations
in particular cases, epigenetics is just one very narrow part of the
broad cancer research field,” Weinberg explains.
Ready for drugs?
Epigenetic marks have attracted attention from pharmaceutical companies
hoping to reverse them. In 2004, the Food and Drug Administration approved
Vidaza, a DNA-demethylating drug manufactured by Pharmion Corporation,
for use in certain blood diseases such as chronic myelomonocytic leukemia.
Vidaza is believed to work indirectly by reducing DNA methylation and
directly by killing cells.
This approval was the realization of a dream for Peter Jones, director
of the University of Southern California/Norris Comprehensive Cancer
Center.
Jones was one of the first researchers to observe methylation patterns
in cancer cells during the late 1970s and early 1980s. He was also the
first to change those patterns by treating cells with chemicals.
One of the chemicals he used was azacytidine—which became Vidaza,
25 years later. Jones believes other success stories will follow.
“I think these drugs will find much more use in the future because
they’re very good at resetting the epigenetic program, which has
gone awry in a cancer cell,” he says.
But Jaenisch worries that companies will rush to create drugs before
fully understanding the consequences of taking them. He cautions scientists
to search for side effects before applying epigenetic therapies. This
warning comes from experience. When the Jaenisch lab reduced the number
of methyl marks on the DNA of tumor-prone mice, the animals developed
fewer macroscopic tumors in their intestines. But in another study, the
lab found that loss of methyl marks can cause aggressive lymphomas.
“If you want to use methylation changes as a therapeutic tool,
you have to know what you’re doing,” says Jaenisch.
Stephen Baylin is more optimistic. He points out that Jaenisch tinkered
with methylation patterns in mouse embryos, when enzymes were still busy
setting and stripping methyl marks. He wonders if the lymphomas can be
blamed on timing, rather than on the treatment itself. Would mice develop
these lymphomas if they were exposed to a demethylating drug as adults?
Despite this debate over side effects, Jaenisch agrees
that epigenetic therapies will eventually become a reality. “These
therapies should materialize after we develop a robust understanding of
the mechanisms involved,” he says. “The good news is epigenetic
marks are reversible, which gives us hope to treat thousands of cancer
patients someday.”
Cancer stem cells and epigenetics
A growing number of scientists accept that not all cells in a tumor
are created equal. They believe that a small population of “stem
cells” gives rise to the slightly differentiated cells that form
the bulk of a tumor. The cancer stem cells divide less frequently than
their specialized daughter cells, but live forever.
“It’s still a matter of faith that the stem cell model applies
to all cases of cancer, though the evidence is compelling for a small
number of solid tumors,” says Whitehead Member Robert Weinberg.
Three recent studies in Nature Genetics, including one by Stephen Baylin,
professor of oncology at the Johns Hopkins University, link methylation
patterns in cancer cells to patterns of DNA-packaging proteins in embryonic
stem cells. The DNA-packaging proteins could leave particular genes,
those involved in keeping a cell specialized rather than immature, vulnerable
to methylation in adult cells.
“It’s certainly possible that these patterns are fundamentally
linked to formation of cancer stem cells, but this needs to be proven,” says
Baylin.
Epigenetics and the environment
“The epigenome allows the genome to talk to the environment,” says
Whitehead Member Rudolf Jaenisch. In fact, the epigenome might explain
the link between particular diets and increased or reduced risk of cancer.
The long-term Harvard Nurses’ Health Study, for example, showed
that women who take a multivitamin pill containing folate (a form of vitamin
B9) lower their risk of colon cancer by 20 percent. Folate happens to be
a methyl group donor, so perhaps it protects the women by acting on the
epigenome.
Or perhaps not. “We don’t know if folate modifies the transcriptional
state of certain genes, but I do suspect that people have underestimated
the plasticity of epigenomes,” says Emma Whitelaw, who studies epigenetics
in her lab at the Queensland Institute of Medical Research. She points out that some epigenetic marks in plants
fluctuate throughout the day as light levels change. It’s not unreasonable
to hypothesize that epigenetic marks fluctuate in humans over a period
of days or years in response to diet.
“I think we’re going to discover a lot of layers of epigenetic
modification (beyond methylation), and some will be more stable than others,” she
says.
| Written by Alyssa Kneller with
contributions by David Cameron. |
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