Literature DB >> 14734468

Correlation of osteopontin protein expression and pathological stage across a wide variety of tumor histologies.

Domenico Coppola1, Marianna Szabo, David Boulware, Patrick Muraca, Marwan Alsarraj, Ann F Chambers, Timothy J Yeatman.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Osteopontin (OPN) is an integrin-binding protein overexpressed in various experimental models of malignancy and appears to be involved in tumorigenesis and metastasis. Although various studies have assessed OPN protein levels in several tumor types, a broad survey of OPN expression in human neoplasia under the same experimental conditions has not been carried out. EXPERIMENTAL
DESIGN: We used immunohistochemistry to detect OPN in a selection of 350 human tumors and 113 normal tissues, from a variety of body sites, using stage-oriented human cancer tissue arrays. Tumors included malignancies from breast (26), ovary (22), endometrium (14), esophagus (10), stomach (11), pancreas (16), bile duct (1), liver (9), colon (20), kidney (53), bladder (33), prostate (28), head and neck (60), salivary glands (14), lung (17), skin (6), and brain (10).
RESULTS: High cytoplasmic OPN staining was observed in 100% of gastric carcinomas, 85% of colorectal carcinomas, 82% of transitional cell carcinomas of the renal pelvis, 81% of pancreatic carcinomas, 72% of renal cell carcinomas, 71% of lung and endometrial carcinomas, 70% of esophageal carcinomas, 58% of squamous cell carcinomas of the head and neck, and 59% of ovarian carcinomas. Although OPN expression was identified in a good number of bladder, prostate, and brain tumors, the majority of 6 skin cancers, 11 of 14 salivary gland cancers, 2 thyroid carcinomas, and 23 of 26 breast cancers revealed low OPN positivity or were negative. When considering all sites, OPN expression significantly correlated with tumor stage (Spearman's correlation coefficient, P = 0.0002). OPN score and stage were also significantly correlated for specific cancer sites including bladder (P = 0.01), colon (P = 0.004), kidney (P = 0.0001), larynx (P = 0.035), mouth (P = 0.046), and salivary gland (P = 0.011).
CONCLUSIONS: This study reports the broad distribution of OPN in human tumors from different body sites, suggesting involvement of this protein in tumor formation. The strong correlation between pathological stage and OPN across multiple tumor types suggests a role for OPN in tumor progression.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 14734468     DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.ccr-1405-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Cancer Res        ISSN: 1078-0432            Impact factor:   12.531


  119 in total

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5.  Short-term effect of combined therapy with Jinlong Capsule and transcatheter arterial chemoembolization on patients with primary hepatic carcinoma and its influence on serum osteopontin expression.

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6.  Simultaneous bactericidal and osteogenic effect of nanoparticulate calcium phosphate powders loaded with clindamycin on osteoblasts infected with Staphylococcus aureus.

Authors:  Vuk Uskoković; Tejal A Desai
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7.  Elevated plasma osteopontin as marker for distant metastases and poor survival in patients with renal cell carcinoma.

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8.  Comparison of osteopontin, beta-catenin and hnRNP B1 expression in lung carcinomas.

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Review 9.  Osteopontin is a promoter for hepatocellular carcinoma metastasis: a summary of 10 years of studies.

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10.  RNA aptamer blockade of osteopontin inhibits growth and metastasis of MDA-MB231 breast cancer cells.

Authors:  Zhiyong Mi; Hongtao Guo; M Benjamin Russell; Yingmiao Liu; Bruce A Sullenger; Paul C Kuo
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