BAZ2A (TIP5) is involved in epigenetic alterations in prostate cancer and its overexpression predicts disease recurrence

  • Lei Gu
  • Sandra C Frommel
  • Christopher C Oakes
  • Ronald Simon
  • Katharina Grupp
  • Cristina Y Gerig
  • Dominik Bär
  • Mark D Robinson
  • Constance Baer
  • Melanie Weiss
  • Zuguang Gu
  • Matthieu Schapira
  • Ruprecht Kuner
  • Holger Sültmann
  • Maurizio Provenzano
  • Marie-Laure Yaspo
  • Benedikt Brors
  • Jan Korbel
  • Thorsten Schlomm
  • Guido Sauter
  • Roland Eils
  • Christoph Plass
  • Raffaella Santoro
  • ICGC Project on Early Onset Prostate Cancer

Abstract

Prostate cancer is driven by a combination of genetic and/or epigenetic alterations. Epigenetic alterations are frequently observed in all human cancers, yet how aberrant epigenetic signatures are established is poorly understood. Here we show that the gene encoding BAZ2A (TIP5), a factor previously implicated in epigenetic rRNA gene silencing, is overexpressed in prostate cancer and is paradoxically involved in maintaining prostate cancer cell growth, a feature specific to cancer cells. BAZ2A regulates numerous protein-coding genes and directly interacts with EZH2 to maintain epigenetic silencing at genes repressed in metastasis. BAZ2A overexpression is tightly associated with a molecular subtype displaying a CpG island methylator phenotype (CIMP). Finally, high BAZ2A levels serve as an independent predictor of biochemical recurrence in a cohort of 7,682 individuals with prostate cancer. This work identifies a new aberrant role for the epigenetic regulator BAZ2A, which can also serve as a useful marker for metastatic potential in prostate cancer.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN1061-4036
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 01.01.2015
PubMed 25485837