Resumen
Loss of DNA methylation is often observed in human tumors, but how this epigenetic alteration impacts the transcriptome of cancer cells remains largely undefined. So far, DNA hypomethylation in tumors has been associated with aberrant activation of a germline-specific gene expression program. Here, we exploited transcriptomic and methylomic datasets of lung adenocarcinoma to investigate the possibility that other gene expression programs also become ectopically activated in hypomethylated tumors. Remarkably, we found that DNA hypomethylation in lung adenocarcinoma is associated with ectopic activation of not only germline-specific genes, but also gene clusters displaying specific expression in the gastrointestinal tract, or in stratified epithelia. Interestingly, expression of genes in this latter group was of prognostic value. Together, our study brings novel insight into the transcriptomic changes associated with DNA hypomethylation in tumors, and is an incentive to explore the value of hypomethylated DNA sequences as cancer biomarkers.