Aims. Ovarian cancer is the most lethal gynecological malignancy, with typically late diagnosis.
Altered DNA methylation of tumor suppressor gene promoters probably plays a relevant role in ovarian carcinogenesis and frequently occurs as an early event in the development of different types of cancer including ovarian carcinoma. GATA4 methylation has been reported in a variety of human cancers.
The aim of this study was to investigate promoter methylation of the GATA4 gene in ovarian cancer by comparison with that in normal ovarian tissue. Methods.
To search for promoter methylation of the GATA4 gene we used MSP (methylation-specific PCR) to compare the methylation status in 67 tissue samples of ovarian cancer with that in 40 control samples. Results.
In our study, methylation-specific PCR revealed GATA4 promoter methylation in 21 of 67 specimens with ovarian cancer (31.3%), and in none of the control ovarian tissue samples. Conclusion.
These results confirm that methylation in the GATA4 promoter region could play an important role in ovarian carcinogenesis, and show new loci which are highly methylated only in ovarian cancer samples and which are associated predominantly with the endometrioid type of ovarian carcinoma.