The intragenic tumor-suppressor microRNA miR-486-5p is often down-regulated in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) but the mechanism is unclear. This study investigated epigenetic co-regulation of miR-486-5p and its host gene ANK1. MiR-486-5p expression in lung tumors and cell lines was significantly reduced compared to normal lung (p < 0.001) and is strongly correlated with ANK1 expression. In vitro, siRNA-mediated ANK1 knockdown in NSCLC cells also reduced miR-486-5p while the DNA methylation inhibitor 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine induced expression of both. ANK1 promoter CpG island was unmethylated in normal lung but methylated in 45% (118/262) lung tumors and 55% (17/31) NSCLC cell lines. After adjustment for tumor histology and smoking, methylation was significantly more prevalent in adenocarcinoma (101/200, 51%) compared to squamous cell carcinoma (17/62, 27%), p < 0.001; HR = 3.513 (CI: 1.818-6.788); and in smokers (73/128, 57%) than never-smokers (28/72, 39%), p = 0.014; HR = 2.086 (CI: 1.157-3.759). These results were independently validated using quantitative methylation data for 809 NSCLC cases from The Cancer Genome Atlas project. Together, our data indicate that aberrant ANK1 methylation is highly prevalent in lung cancer, discriminate tumors by histology and patients' smoking history, and contributes to miR-486-5p repression.
Keywords: ANK1; Epigenetics; Intronic microRNA; NSCLC; miR-486-5p.
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