S. Tornaletti et Gp. Pfeifer, COMPLETE AND TISSUE-INDEPENDENT METHYLATION OF CPG SITES IN THE P53 GENE - IMPLICATIONS FOR MUTATIONS IN HUMAN CANCERS, Oncogene, 10(8), 1995, pp. 1493-1499
CpG dinucleotides are the target of about one third of transition muta
tions found in human genetic diseases and tumors. Methylation at these
sites is thought to be the cause of these genetic changes through spo
ntaneous deamination of 5-methylcytosine. In order to define the contr
ibution of 5-methylcytosine to the spectrum of p53 mutations in human
cancers, we have determined the complete DNA methylation pattern along
exons 5-8 of the human p53 gene by ligation-mediated polymerase chain
reaction genomic sequencing. The study was conducted with nine differ
ent types of normal human tissue and cell lines, including skin fibrob
lasts, keratinocytes, lung epithelial cells, mammary epithelial cells
and colonic mucosa cells. We found that the p53 sequences along exons
5-8 are completely methylated at every CpG site, including 46 differen
t sites on both DNA strands. This methylation pattern is tissue-indepe
ndent suggesting that tissue-specific methylation does not contribute
to the differential mutation patterns seen in tumors, The occurrence o
f mutational hotspots at specific CpG sites is not related to selectiv
e methylation of only a subset of CpGs but may rather depend on a sele
ction bias for particular amino acid changes. Our results are not inco
nsistent with theories that mutations in tumors with high CpG mutation
rates, like colon cancer, are caused by spontaneous deamination of 5-
methylcytosine and mutations in tumors with a lack of CpG involvement
reflect superimposed fingerprints from exogenous carcinogens. However,
given the lack of tissue specificity of methylation, alternative expl
anations (eg targeting of methylated CpG sites by tissue-selective car
cinogens) should be considered to explain the high percentage of CPG m
utations in some tumor types.