CpG islands that are hypermethylated can play three roles in cancer: in
diagnosis,
prognosis and in
monitoring. It is useful to consider a particular tumor type, called
CpG island methylator phenotype, or CIMP: higher levels of CpG island hypermethylation are found in CIMP. The frequent occurrence of hypermethylation was first described in
colorectal cancer and later for
glioma. More recently, it has been studied for
neuroblastomas. Colorectal cancer will not necessarily have the same set of hypermethylated CpG islands as in a glioma, and this clinical distinctness of tumors can be interpreted by doctors. Hypermethylated CpG islands also act as
biomarkers, as they can help distinguish cancer from normal cells in the same sample. Colorectal CIMP was one of the first to be described. Patients in this category of cancer tend to be older, female and have a defective
MLH1 function. The tumors are usually in the ascending colon. They also have a good prognostic outcome. Clinically distinct phenotypes of CIMP also suggest that there is potential for
epigenetic therapy. In diagnosis, one can identify the tumor type and tumor subtype, as well as its primary tumor when that is unknown. Hypermethylation increases with
tumorigenicity, which is an indication of the prognosis of cancer. For example, high methylation is a marker for poor prognosis in lung cancer. CpG island hypermethylation shows promise for
molecular monitoring of patients with cancer, and is also a potential target for therapeutic use. alterations in tumor progression: Epigenetic mistakes are clinically relevant is because they progress over time. The image starts with normal tissue and progresses all the way to
metastasis. The global level of methylation decreases as one progresses from normal tissue to metastatic tissue. However, methylation at some
CpG islands increases in density. One might be able to use these methylation markers to detect whether a tissue is cancerous or metastatic. Aberrations in
epigenetic control that are seen in cancer pertain to
DNA methylation, which can be either
locus-specific DNA hypermethylation or
genome-wide DNA hypomethylation. Under locus-specific DNA hypermethylation comes
CpG island hypermethylation. DNA methylation acts as an alternative to
genetic mutation. According to the
Knudson hypothesis, cancer is a result of multiple hits to DNA, and
DNA methylation can be one such hit. Epigenetic mutations such as DNA methylation are
mitotically heritable, but also reversible, unlike gene mutations. The identity of hypermethylated CpG islands varies by the type of tumor. Some single gene examples include
MLH1 in
colorectal cancer and
BRCA1 in
breast cancer. ==References==