Expression patterns of candidate susceptibility genes HNF1β and CtBP2 in prostate cancer: Association with tumor progression

Urologic Oncology, 32(4):426-32

DEBIAIS-DELPECH C., GODET J., PEDRETTI N., BERNARD FX., IRANI J., CATHELINEAU X., CUSSENOT O. and FROMONT G. (2013)

Department of Pathology, CHU-Universite de Poitiers, France.
Department of Molecular Biology, Bioalternatives, Gencay, France.
Department of Urology, CHU-Universite de Poitiers, France.
Department of Urology, Institut Mutualiste Montsouris, Paris, France.
Centre d’etude et de Recherche sur les Pathologies Prostatique (CeRePP), Hospital Tenon, Assistance Publique Hôpitaux de Paris, France.

Abstract

Genome-wide association studies have identified variants at multiple loci associated with prostate cancer (PCa) risk. Some of these loci include candidate susceptibility genes, such as MSMB, HNF1β, and C-terminal-binding protein (CtBP2). Except for MSMB, the clinicopathological significance of these genes has not been investigated. We therefore aimed to analyze their expression in PCa tissues, in relation with tumor progression and aggressiveness.
Protein expression was evaluated by immunohistochemistry on tissue microarrays containing samples from normal prostate (NL, n = 91), high-grade prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia (PIN, n = 61), clinically localized PCa (CLC, n = 434), PCa metastases (M, n = 28), and castration-resistant PCa (CRC, n = 49). Moreover, mRNA expression for each marker was assessed by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction, on 53 frozen samples of NL, CLC, and CRC.
These genes were differentially expressed at the different stages of PCa natural history. MSMB expression decreased with disease development and progression. In contrast, nuclear HNF1β and CtBP2 staining significantly increased in the CRC and M groups when compared with CLC, together with the transcripts levels. In patients with CLC, HNF1β and CtBP2 nuclear expressions were strongly associated with cancer cell proliferation. After adjusting for the Gleason score and the pathological stage, none of the candidate genes was significantly predictive of recurrence after radical prostatectomy. In patients with CRC, CtBP2 nuclear staining was associated with shorter overall survival.
The decrease of MSMB expression during tumor progression strongly supports its role as a tumor-suppressor gene. Although its functions remain to be clarified in PCa cells, HNF1β and CtBP2 are associated with cancer cell proliferation, tumor progression, and castration-resistant disease.

© 2013 Published by Elsevier Inc.

KEYWORDS:Candidate gene analysis; CtBP2; HNF1 transcription factor; Immunohistochemistry; Prostate cancer; RT-PCR

Check out Bioalternatives’ updates and experience new testing ideas

  • Bioassays, models and services
  • Posts and publications
  • Events
  • The legal basis for the processing is consent. Your e-mail address will only be communicated to the following recipients: the departments concerned and authorised by QIMA LIFE SCIENCE. This data is kept for as long as you are registered to the newsletter.

    You can access your data, rectify it, request its deletion or exercise your right to limit the processing of your data, withdraw your consent to the processing of your data at any time, oppose the processing of your data and you have a right to the portability of your data.

    Visit cnil.fr for more information on your rights.
    You can exercise all your rights using the following linkGestion des droits or by writing to dpo-qima@agencergpd.eu. If you feel, after contacting us, that your "Informatique et Libertés" rights are not being respected, you can submit a complaint to the CNIL.

  • The information collected on this form is recorded in a file used by QIMA Life Sciences to send you its newsletter.