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Article Abstract

Cervical cancer (CACX) is one of the top causes of cancer death in women globally. The involvement of several cellular pathways in carcinogenesis is still poorly understood. Here, we focused to evaluate the contributory role of Mismatch Repair (MMR) pathway genes-MLH1 and MSH2 in CACX and their association with chemo-tolerance of the disease. For this purpose, molecular profiles (expression/promoter methylation/deletion) of the genes were analysed in both normal cervical epithelium and tumour tissue, also validated in in-silico dataset as well. Later on, prognostic importance of the genes was identified through analysis of their methylation/expression status in plasma DNA of circulating tumour cells (CTCs) and cisplatin-tolerant CACX cell lines respectively. It was found that the expression profile of MLH1 and MSH2 genes was considerably reduced from undifferentiated basal-parabasal layers of normal cervical epithelium towards progression of the disease. Further analysis showed that frequent deletion [34-48%] and promoter methylation events [28-46%] of the genes were the plausible reasons for their reduced expression during tumorigenesis. Incidentally, the prevalence of MLH1 [32%] and MSH2 [27%] promoter methylation found in CTCs of plasma of the clinically advanced CACX patients implicated their prognostic importance of the disease. In addition, the patients having high alterations of those genes resulted in poor patient outcomes even after the therapy. In in-depth analysis of this result in cisplatin-tolerant CACX cell lines, we discovered that increased promoter methylation frequency of those genes at higher concentrations of cisplatin and gradual accumulation of the cells in the G2/M phase of the cell cycle were the rational causes for their reduced expression and MMR deficiency in the system. Hence, it is possible to conclude that the gradual down-regulation of MLH1 and MSH2 proteins may be a key event for MMR pathway inactivation in CACX. This might also be associated with chemo-tolerance and overall poor survival among the patients.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gene.2023.147746DOI Listing

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