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Dive into the research topics where Taina T. Nieminen is active.

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Featured researches published by Taina T. Nieminen.


Carcinogenesis | 2008

Differential cancer predisposition in Lynch syndrome: insights from molecular analysis of brain and urinary tract tumors

Annette Gylling; Taina T. Nieminen; Wael M. Abdel-Rahman; Kyösti Nuorva; M. Juhola; Emmi I. Joensuu; Heikki Järvinen; Jukka-Pekka Mecklin; Markku Aarnio; Päivi Peltomäki

Hereditary non-polyposis colorectal carcinoma (Lynch syndrome) is among the most common hereditary cancers in man and a model of cancers arising through deficient DNA mismatch repair (MMR). Lynch syndrome patients are predisposed to different cancers in a non-random fashion, the basis of which is poorly understood. We addressed this issue by determining the molecular profiles for different tumors from a nationwide cohort of Lynch syndrome families (approximately 150 tumors in total). We focused on some less prevalent cancers, affecting the brain (n = 7) and urinary tract (five bladder and five ureter uroepithelial cancers and four kidney adenocarcinomas), and compared their molecular characteristics to those of the most common cancers, colorectal, gastric and endometrial adenocarcinomas, from the same families. Despite origin from verified MMR gene mutation carriers, the frequency of high-level microsatellite instability in tumors varied between high (100-96% for ureter, stomach and colon), intermediate (63-60% for endometrium and bladder) and low (25-0% for kidney and brain). In contrast to gastrointestinal and endometrial carcinomas, active (nuclear) beta-catenin was rare and KRAS mutations were absent in brain and urological tumors. Compared with other tumors, frequent stabilization of p53 protein characterized urinary tract cancers. Promoter methylation of tumor suppressor genes discriminated the tumors in an organ-specific manner. Our findings suggest that different Lynch syndrome tumors develop along different routes. Uroepithelial cancers of the ureter (and bladder to lesser extent) share many characteristics of MMR deficiency-driven tumorigenesis, whereas brain tumors and kidney adenocarcinomas follow separate pathways.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2009

Molecular analysis of endometrial tumorigenesis: importance of complex hyperplasia regardless of atypia.

Taina T. Nieminen; Annette Gylling; Wael M. Abdel-Rahman; Kyösti Nuorva; Markku Aarnio; Laura Renkonen-Sinisalo; Heikki Järvinen; Jukka-Pekka Mecklin; Ralf Bützow; Päivi Peltomäki

Purpose: Endometrial carcinoma (EC) is common in the population and the most frequent extracolonic malignancy in hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal carcinoma (HNPCC)/Lynch syndrome. We characterized precursor lesions of endometrioid EC to identify markers of malignant transformation and tumor progression. Experimental Design: Serial specimens of normal endometrium, simple hyperplasia, complex hyperplasia without atypia, complex hyperplasia with atypia, and endometrial carcinoma obtained during a 10-year surveillance of DNA mismatch repair (MMR) gene mutation carriers (together 110 samples) were molecularly profiled and compared with a sporadic reference series of endometrial specimens taken for nonmalignant reasons (62 samples). Results: Among MMR gene mutation carriers, decreased MMR protein expression was present in 7% in normal endometrium, 40% in simple hyperplasia, 100% in complex hyperplasia without atypia, 92% in complex hyperplasia with atypia, and 100% in endometrial carcinoma. Microsatellite instability frequencies were lower (6%, 17%, 67%, 38%, and 64%, respectively). Among 24 tumor suppressor genes, the number of methylated loci increased from normal endometrium to simple hyperplasia to complex hyperplasia (complex hyperplasia without atypia/complex hyperplasia with atypia) in both Lynch syndrome and reference series. The most frequently methylated genes were CDH13, RASSF1A, and GSTP1. In MMR gene mutation carriers, MMR and methylation defects appeared up to 12 years before endometrial carcinoma. Conclusions: Molecular changes in endometrial tissue are detectable several years before endometrial carcinoma in genetically predisposed individuals. Abnormal MMR and methylation classify normal endometrium and simple hyperplasia into one category and complex hyperplasia without atypia, complex hyperplasia with atypia, and endometrial carcinoma into another, suggesting that, contrary to a traditional view, complex hyperplasia without atypia and complex hyperplasia with atypia are equally important as precursor lesions of endometrial carcinoma. (Clin Cancer Res 2009;15(18):5772–83)


Gastroenterology | 2014

Germline Mutation of RPS20, Encoding a Ribosomal Protein, Causes Predisposition to Hereditary Nonpolyposis Colorectal Carcinoma Without DNA Mismatch Repair Deficiency

Taina T. Nieminen; Marie-Françoise O’Donohue; Yunpeng Wu; Hannes Lohi; Stephen W. Scherer; Andrew Paterson; Pekka Ellonen; Wael M. Abdel-Rahman; Satu Valo; Jukka-Pekka Mecklin; Heikki Järvinen; Pierre-Emmanuel Gleizes; Päivi Peltomäki

Little is known about the genetic factors that contribute to familial colorectal cancer type X (FCCX), characterized by hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal carcinoma with no mismatch repair defects. Genetic linkage analysis, exome sequencing, tumor studies, and functional investigations of 4 generations of a FCCX family led to the identification of a truncating germline mutation in RPS20, which encodes a component (S20) of the small ribosomal subunit and is a new colon cancer predisposition gene. The mutation was associated with a defect in pre–ribosomal RNA maturation. Our findings show that mutations in a gene encoding a ribosomal protein can predispose individuals to microsatellite-stable colon cancer. Evaluation of additional FCCX families for mutations in RPS20 and other ribosome-associated genes is warranted.


Journal of Molecular Medicine | 2012

LINE-1 hypomethylation in familial and sporadic cancer

Walter Pavicic; Emmi I. Joensuu; Taina T. Nieminen; Päivi Peltomäki

Increased and decreased methylation at specific sequences (hypermethylation and hypomethylation, respectively) is characteristic of tumor DNA compared to normal DNA and promotes carcinogenesis in multiple ways including genomic instability. Long interspersed element (LINE), an abundant class of retrotransposons, provides a surrogate marker for global hypomethylation. We developed methylation-specific multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification assays to study LINE-1 methylation in cases of colorectal, gastric, and endometrial cancer (N = 276), stratified by patient category [sporadic; Lynch syndrome (LS); familial colorectal cancer type X (FCCX)] and microsatellite instability status. Within each patient group, LINE-1 showed lower methylation in tumor DNA relative to paired normal DNA and hypomethylation was statistically significant in most cases. Interestingly, normal colorectal mucosa samples from different patient groups displayed differences in LINE-1 methylation that mirrored differences between the respective tumor tissues, with a decreasing trend for LINE-1 methylation from patients with sporadic colorectal cancer to LS to FCCX. Despite the fact that the degree of LINE-1 methylation is generally tissue specific, normal colorectal mucosa, gastric mucosa, and endometrium from LS patients showed similar levels of LINE-1 methylation. Our results suggest that the degree of LINE-1 methylation may constitute a “field defect” that may predispose normal tissues for cancer development.


Breast Cancer Research | 2012

Breast carcinoma and Lynch syndrome: molecular analysis of tumors arising in mutation carriers, non-carriers, and sporadic cases

Johanna E. Lotsari; Annette Gylling; Wael M. Abdel-Rahman; Taina T. Nieminen; Kristiina Aittomäki; Marjukka Friman; Reino Pitkänen; Markku Aarnio; Heikki Järvinen; Jukka-Pekka Mecklin; Teijo Kuopio; Päivi Peltomäki

IntroductionBreast carcinoma is the most common cancer in women, but its incidence is not increased in Lynch syndrome (LS) and studies on DNA mismatch repair deficiency (MMR) in LS-associated breast cancers have arrived at conflicting results. This study aimed to settle the question as to whether breast carcinoma belongs to the LS tumor spectrum.MethodsMMR status and epigenetic profiles were determined for all available breast carcinomas identified among 200 LS families from a nation-wide registry (23 tumors from mutation carriers and 18 from non-carriers). Sporadic breast carcinomas (n = 49) and other cancers (n = 105) from MMR gene mutation carriers were studied for comparison.ResultsThe proportion of breast carcinomas that were MMR-deficient based on absent MMR protein, presence of microsatellite instability, or both was significantly (P = 0.00016) higher among breast carcinomas from mutation carriers (13/20, 65%) compared to non-carriers (0/14, 0%). While the average age at breast carcinoma diagnosis was similar in carriers (56 years) and non-carriers (54 years), it was lower for MMR-deficient versus proficient tumors in mutation carriers (53 years versus 61 years, P = 0.027). Among mutation carriers, absent MMR protein was less frequent in breast carcinoma (65%) than in any of seven other tumor types studied (75% to 100%). Tumor suppressor promoter methylation patterns were organ-specific and similar between breast carcinomas from mutation carriers and non-carriers.ConclusionsBreast carcinoma from MMR gene mutation carriers resembles common breast carcinoma in many respects (for example, general clinicopathological and epigenetic profiles). MMR status makes a distinction: over half are MMR-deficient typical of LS spectrum tumors, while the remaining subset which is MMR-proficient may develop differently. The results are important for appropriate surveillance in mutation carriers and may be relevant for LS diagnosis in selected cases.


Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 2012

Distinct Genetic and Epigenetic Signatures of Colorectal Cancers According to Ethnic Origin

Taina T. Nieminen; Soheir Shoman; Saad Eissa; Päivi Peltomäki; Wael M. Abdel-Rahman

Background: The outcome of colorectal cancer varies depending on ethnic origin. Egyptian colorectal carcinoma is surprisingly young-age disease with high proportion of rectal and advanced stage cancers. Methods: We characterized 69 sporadic Egyptian colorectal cancers for promoter methylation at 24 tumor suppressor genes, microsatellite instability, and expression of mismatch repair, p53, and β-catenin proteins. Data were compared with 80 Western colorectal carcinoma of sporadic and familial origin from Finland. Results: Egyptian colorectal carcinomas showed significantly higher methylation of the microsatellite stable (MSS) tumors as reflected by the average number of methylated genes per case (P = 0.00002) and tumor suppressor gene methylator phenotype (TSGMP), defined here as methylation of ≥5 genes, (P = 0.0001) compared with the sporadic Western cancers. The TSGMP was associated with advanced stage in the Egyptian cancers (P = 0.0016). Four genes were differentially methylated between Egyptian and Western cases, of which the association of CDKN2B/p15 methylation with Egyptian origin was outstanding (P = 4.83E-10). Egyptian carcinoma also showed significantly lower frequency of nuclear β-catenin localization than the sporadic Western cancers (P = 0.00006) but similar to that of the familial Western subset designated as familial colorectal cancer type X. Conclusions: We show novel pathway in colon carcinogenesis marked by high methylation of MSS cancers, remarkable CDKN2B/p15 methylation, and low frequency of Wnt signaling activation. Impact: Our findings highlight the possible effect of environmental exposures in carcinogenesis through DNA methylation and should have applications in prevention, molecular diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev; 21(1); 202–11. ©2011 AACR.


Genes, Chromosomes and Cancer | 2014

Promoter-specific alterations of APC are a rare cause for mutation-negative familial adenomatous polyposis.

Walter Pavicic; Taina T. Nieminen; Annette Gylling; Juha-Pekka Pursiheimo; Asta Laiho; Attila Gyenesei; Heikki Järvinen; Päivi Peltomäki

In familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP), 20% of classical and 70% of attenuated/atypical (AFAP) cases remain mutation‐negative after routine testing; yet, allelic expression imbalance may suggest an APC alteration. Our aim was to determine the proportion of families attributable to genetic or epigenetic changes in the APC promoter region. We studied 51 unrelated families/cases (26 with classical FAP and 25 with AFAP) with no point mutations in the exons and exon/intron borders and no rearrangements by multiplex ligation‐dependent probe amplification (MLPA, P043‐B1). Promoter‐specific events of APC were addressed by targeted resequencing, MLPA (P043‐C1), methylation‐specific MLPA, and Sanger sequencing of promoter regions. A novel 132‐kb deletion encompassing the APC promoter 1B and upstream sequence occurred in a classical FAP family with allele‐specific APC expression. No promoter‐specific point mutations or hypermethylation were present in any family. In conclusion, promoter‐specific alterations are a rare cause for mutation‐negative FAP (1/51, 2%). The frequency and clinical correlations of promoter 1B deletions are poorly defined. This investigation provides frequencies of 1/26 (4%) for classical FAP, 0/25 (0%) for AFAP, and 1/7 (14%) for families with allele‐specific expression of APC. Clinically, promoter 1B deletions may associate with classical FAP without extracolonic manifestations.


Genes, Chromosomes and Cancer | 2015

Methyltransferase expression and tumor suppressor gene methylation in sporadic and familial colorectal cancer

Emmi I. Joensuu; Taina T. Nieminen; Johanna E. Lotsari; Walter Pavicic; Wael M. Abdel-Rahman; Päivi Peltomäki

Molecular mechanisms underlying coordinated hypermethylation of multiple CpG islands in cancer remain unclear and studies of methyltransferase enzymes have arrived at conflicting results. We focused on DNMT1 and DNMT3B, DNA methyltransferases responsible for (de novo) methylation, and EZH2, histone (H3K27) methyltransferase, and examined their roles in tumor suppressor gene (TSG) methylation patterns we have previously established in sporadic and familial cancers. Our investigation comprised 165 tumors, stratified by tissue of origin (117 colorectal and 48 endometrial carcinomas) and sporadic vs. familial disease (57 sporadic vs. 60 familial, mainly Lynch syndrome, colorectal carcinomas). By immunohistochemical evaluation, EZH2 protein expression was associated with a TSG methylator phenotype. DNMT1, DNMT3B, and EZH2 were expressed at significantly higher levels in tumor vs. normal tissues. DNMT1 and EZH2 expression were positively correlated and higher in microsatellite‐unstable vs. microsatellite‐stable tumors, whether sporadic or hereditary. Ki‐67 expression mirrored the same pattern. Promoter methylation of the methyltransferase genes themselves was addressed as a possible cause behind their altered expression. While DNMT1 or EZH2 did not show differential methylation between normal and tumor tissues, DNMT3B analysis corroborated the regulatory role of a distal promoter region. Our study shows that methyltransferase expression in cancer depends on the tissue of origin, microsatellite‐instability status, cellular proliferation, and—in the case of DNMT3B—promoter methylation of the respective gene. Translation of methyltransferase expression into DNA methylation appears complex as suggested by the fact that except for EZH2, no clear association between methyltransferase protein expression and TSG methylation was observed.


Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2016

Desmoid tumor patients carry an elevated risk of familial adenomatous polyposis

Laura Koskenvuo; Päivi Peltomäki; Laura Renkonen-Sinisalo; Annette Gylling; Taina T. Nieminen; Ari Ristimäki; Anna Lepistö

The prevalence of desmoid tumors among patients with familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) is at least 10%, and the prevalence of FAP among desmoid patients varies between 7.5–16%.


Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention | 2014

Loss of p15(INK4b) Expression in colorectal cancer is Linked to Ethnic Origin

Wael M. Abdel-Rahman; Taina T. Nieminen; Soheir Shoman; Saad Eissa; Päivi Peltomäki

Colorectal cancers remain to be a common cause of cancer-related death. Early-onset cases as well as those of various ethnic origins have aggressive clinical features, the basis of which requires further exploration. The aim of this work was to examine the expression patterns of p15INK4b and SMAD4 in colorectal carcinoma of different ethnic origins. Fifty-five sporadic colorectal carcinoma of Egyptian origin, 25 of which were early onset, and 54 cancers of Finnish origin were immunohistochemically stained with antibodies against p15INK4b and SMAD4 proteins. Data were compared to the methylation status of the p15INK4b gene promotor. p15INK4b was totally lost or deficient (lost in ≥ 50% of tumor cell) in 47/55 (85%) tumors of Egyptian origin as compared to 6/50 (12%) tumors of Finnish origin (p=7e-15). In the Egyptian cases with p15INK4b loss and available p15INK4b promotor methylation status, 89% of cases which lost p15INK4b expression were associated with p15INK4b gene promotor hypermethylation. SMAD4 was lost or deficient in 25/54 (46%) tumors of Egyptian origin and 28/48 (58%) tumors of Finnish origin. 22/54 (41%) Egyptian tumors showed combined loss/deficiency of both p15INK4b and SMAD4, while p15INK4b was selectively lost/deficient with positive SMAD4 expression in 24/54 (44%) tumors. Loss of p15INK4b was associated with older age at presentation (>50 years) in the Egyptian tumors (p=0.04). These data show for the first time that p15INK4b loss of expression marks a subset of colorectal cancers and ethnic origin may play a role in this selection. In a substantial number of cases, the loss was independent of SMAD4 but rather associated with p15INK4b gene promotor hypermethylation and old age which could be related to different environmental exposures.

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Jukka-Pekka Mecklin

University of Eastern Finland

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Walter Pavicic

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Anna Lepistö

Helsinki University Central Hospital

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Markku Aarnio

Helsinki University Central Hospital

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