Elevated microsatellite alterations at selected tetranucleotides (EMAST) and mismatch repair gene expression in prostate cancer

被引:0
|
作者
Maximilian Burger
Stefan Denzinger
Christine G. Hammerschmied
Andrea Tannapfel
Ellen C. Obermann
Wolf F. Wieland
Arndt Hartmann
Robert Stoehr
机构
[1] University of Regensburg,Department of Urology
[2] Ruhr-University of Bochum,Institute of Pathology
[3] University of Regensburg,Institute of Pathology
来源
关键词
Prostate cancer; EMAST; MSI; Mismatch repair; p53;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Elevated microsatellite alterations at selected tetranucleotides (EMAST), a new form of microsatellite instability (MSI) affecting tetranucleotide repeats, was recently described to be frequent in several tumor types (e.g., bladder, lung, ovarian, and skin cancers). EMAST was found as a form of microsatellite alteration distinct from the MSI phenotype in hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC)-related tumors which mostly affects mono- and dinucleotide repeats. To date, no study has investigated the role of EMAST in prostate cancer. We therefore analyzed 81 prostate tumors using 10 markers frequently detecting EMAST in other cancer types and the National Cancer Institute-consensus panel for HNPCC detection plus BAT40. In addition, we investigated p53 gene alterations [loss of heterozygosity (LOH)] and the expression of p53 and the mismatch repair (MMR) genes hMLH1 and hMSH2 on tissue microarrays. EMAST was detected in 4/81 (5%) cases and MSI in 6/79 (7.6%) cases. LOH of p53 was found in 9/45 (20%) informative cases. There was no correlation between MSI status and the histopathological or molecular characteristics of the tumors. Immunohistochemistry revealed p53 positivity in 5/61 (8%) tumors. There was a significant correlation between tumors showing a recurrence within 3 years after treatment and p53 positivity (p=0.029). Reduced hMLH1 expression, but no complete loss, was detected in 9/41 (22%) tumors without any correlations to histopathological or clinical features. Analysis of hMSH2 expression was available from 58/81 (72%) tumors. Staining intensity was as follows: negative in 7/58 (12%), weak staining in 16/58 (27.5%) samples, moderate staining in 19/58 (33%) samples, and strong staining in 16/58 (27.5%) samples. When negative/weak staining and moderate/strong staining were considered as two groups, there was a significant association between hMSH2 expression and tumor recurrence (p=0.039). In conclusion, our data show that MSI and EMAST are infrequent but distinct patterns of MSI in prostate tumors not related to MMR defects, p53 alterations, and histopathological characteristics. p53 positivity and moderate to strong hMSH2 expression of prostate tumors are correlated with early disease recurrence and indicate an unfavorable clinical course of the disease. These two genes could be useful biomarkers for the prediction of patients’ outcome and should be analyzed in prospective studies.
引用
收藏
页码:833 / 841
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Gene expression alterations in human prostate cancer
    Luo, JH
    DRUGS OF TODAY, 2002, 38 (10) : 713 - 719
  • [32] Immunogenomic analyses associate immunological alterations with mismatch repair defects in prostate cancer
    Rodrigues, Daniel Nava
    Rescigno, Pasquale
    Liu, David
    Yuan, Wei
    Carreira, Suzanne
    Lambros, Maryou B.
    Seed, George
    Mateo, Joaquin
    Riisnaes, Ruth
    Mullane, Stephanie
    Margolis, Claire
    Miao, Diana
    Miranda, Susana
    Dolling, David
    Clarke, Matthew
    Bertan, Claudia
    Crespo, Mateus
    Boysen, Gunther
    Ferreira, Ana
    Sharp, Adam
    Figueiredo, Ines
    Keliher, Daniel
    Aldubayan, Saud
    Burke, Kelly P.
    Sumanasuriya, Semini
    Fontes, Mariane Sousa
    Bianchini, Diletta
    Zafeiriou, Zafeiris
    Mendes, Larissa Sena Teixeira
    Mouw, Kent
    Schweizer, Michael T.
    Pritchard, Colin C.
    Salipante, Stephen
    Taplin, Mary-Ellen
    Beltran, Himisha
    Rubin, Mark A.
    Cieslik, Marcin
    Robinson, Dan
    Heath, Elizabeth
    Schultz, Nikolaus
    Armenia, Joshua
    Abida, Wassim
    Scher, Howard
    Lord, Christopher
    D'Andrea, Alan
    Sawyers, Charles L.
    Chinnaiyan, Arul M.
    Alimonti, Andrea
    Nelson, Peter S.
    Drake, Charles G.
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION, 2018, 128 (10): : 4441 - 4453
  • [33] Microsatellite instability and mismatch repair gene mutations in patients with sporadic colorectal cancer
    Lage, PA
    Claro, IP
    Gaspar, CM
    Maia, LM
    Cravo, ML
    Chaves, PP
    Nobre-Leitao, CA
    GASTROENTEROLOGY, 1999, 116 (04) : A448 - A448
  • [34] Alterations of DNA mismatch repair proteins and microsatellite instability levels in gastric cancer cell lines
    Yao, Y
    Tao, H
    Kim, JJ
    Burkhead, B
    Carloni, E
    Gasbarrini, A
    Sepulveda, AR
    LABORATORY INVESTIGATION, 2004, 84 (07) : 915 - 922
  • [35] Microsatellite instability: An expression of mismatch repair gene defects in renal cell carcinoma.
    Bannon, CA
    Curran, B
    Kay, EW
    McLean, PA
    Leader, MB
    JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, 1998, 159 (05): : 194 - 194
  • [36] Mismatch repair gene expression defects contribute to microsatellite instability in ovarian carcinoma - Reply
    Geisler, JP
    Buller, RE
    CANCER, 2004, 100 (11) : 2486 - 2486
  • [37] Mismatch repair enzyme expression in primary and castrate resistant prostate cancer
    Nghiem, Belinda
    Zhang, Xiaotun
    Lam, Hung-Ming
    True, Lawrence D.
    Coleman, Ilsa
    Higano, Celestia S.
    Nelson, Peter S.
    Pritchard, Colin C.
    Morrissey, Colm
    ASIAN JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, 2016, 3 (04) : 223 - 228
  • [38] Germline and somatic DNA repair gene alterations in prostate cancer
    Dall'Era, Marc A.
    McPherson, John D.
    Gao, Allen C.
    DeVere White, Ralph W.
    Gregg, Jeffrey P.
    Lara, Primo N., Jr.
    CANCER, 2020, 126 (13) : 2980 - 2985
  • [39] Mismatch repair gene product expression and colorectal cancer in Hispanics
    De Jesus-Monge, Wilfredo E.
    Zhao, Ronghua
    Gonzalez-Keelan, Carmen
    Hamilton, Stanley R.
    Rodriguez-Bigas, Miguel
    Cruz-Correa, Marcia R.
    GASTROENTEROLOGY, 2008, 134 (04) : A606 - A607
  • [40] ELEVATED MICROSATELLITE ALTERATIONS AT SELECTED TETRA-NUCLEOTIDE (EMAST) IN NON-SMALL CELL LUNG CANCERS - A POTENTIAL DETERMINANT OF SUSCEPTIBILITY TO MULTIPLE MALIGNANCIES
    Arai, Hiromasa
    Okudela, Koji
    Oshiro, Hisashi
    Komitsu, Noriko
    Fujii, Keita
    Tsuboi, Masahiro
    Masuda, Munetaka
    JOURNAL OF THORACIC ONCOLOGY, 2013, 8 : S753 - S754