info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Ephrin-B1 Is a novel biomarker of bladder cancer aggressiveness. studies in murine models and in human samples
Fecha
2020-03Registro en:
Mencucci, Maria Victoria; Lapyckyj, Lara; Rosso, Marina; Besso, María José; Belgorosky, Denise; et al.; Ephrin-B1 Is a novel biomarker of bladder cancer aggressiveness. studies in murine models and in human samples; Frontiers Media; Frontiers in Oncology; 10; 3-2020; -
2234-943X
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Mencucci, Maria Victoria
Lapyckyj, Lara
Rosso, Marina
Besso, María José
Belgorosky, Denise
Isola, Mariana
Vanzulli, Silvia
Lodillinsky, Catalina
Eiján, Ana María
Tejerizo, Juan Carlos
González, Matías Ignacio
Zubieta, María Ercilia
Vazquez, Monica Hebe
Resumen
Bladder cancer (BC) is the ninth most common cancer worldwide, but molecular changes are still under study. During tumor progression, Epithelial cadherin (E-cadherin) expression is altered and β-catenin may be translocated to the nucleus, where it acts as co-transcription factor of tumor invasion associated genes. This investigation further characterizes E-cadherin and β-catenin associated changes in BC, by combining bioinformatics, an experimental murine cell model (MB49/MB49-I) and human BC samples. In in silico studies, a DisGeNET (gene-disease associations database) analysis identified CDH1 (E-cadherin gene) as one with highest score among 130 BC related-genes. COSMIC mutation analysis revealed CDH1 low mutations rates. Compared to MB49 control BC cells, MB49-I invasive cells showed decreased E-cadherin expression, E- to P-cadherin switch, higher β-catenin nuclear signal and lower cytoplasmic p-Ser33-β-catenin signal, higher Ephrin-B1 ligand and EphB2 receptor expression, higher Phospho-Stat3 and Urokinase-type Plasminogen Activator (UPA), and UPA receptor expression. MB49-I cells transfected with Ephrin-B1 siRNA showed lower migratory and invasive capacity than control cells (scramble siRNA). By immunohistochemistry, orthotopic MB49-I tumors had lower E-cadherin, increased nuclear β-catenin, lower pSer33-β-catenin cytoplasmic signal, and higher Ephrin-B1 expression than MB49 tumors. Similar changes were found in human BC tumors, and 83% of infiltrating tumors depicted a high Ephrin-B1 stain. An association between higher Ephrin-B1 expression and higher stage and tumor grade was found. No association was found between abnormal E-cadherin signal, Ephrin-B1 expression or clinical-pathological parameter. This study thoroughly analyzed E-cadherin and associated changes in BC, and reports Ephrin-B1 as a new marker of tumor aggressiveness.