Literature DB >> 15161682

Selection of potential markers for epithelial ovarian cancer with gene expression arrays and recursive descent partition analysis.

Karen H Lu1, Andrea P Patterson, Lin Wang, Rebecca T Marquez, Edward N Atkinson, Keith A Baggerly, Lance R Ramoth, Daniel G Rosen, Jinsong Liu, Ingegerd Hellstrom, David Smith, Lynn Hartmann, David Fishman, Andrew Berchuck, Rosemarie Schmandt, Regina Whitaker, David M Gershenson, Gordon B Mills, Robert C Bast.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Advanced-stage epithelial ovarian cancer has a poor prognosis with long-term survival in less than 30% of patients. When the disease is detected in stage I, more than 90% of patients can be cured by conventional therapy. Screening for early-stage disease with individual serum tumor markers, such as CA125, is limited by the fact that no single marker is up-regulated and shed in adequate amounts by all ovarian cancers. Consequently, use of multiple markers in combination might detect a larger fraction of early-stage ovarian cancers. EXPERIMENTAL
DESIGN: To identify potential candidates for novel markers, we have used Affymetrix human genome arrays (U95 series) to analyze differences in gene expression of 41,441 known genes and expressed sequence tags between five pools of normal ovarian surface epithelial cells (OSE) and 42 epithelial ovarian cancers of different stages, grades, and histotypes. Recursive descent partition analysis (RDPA) was performed with 102 probe sets representing 86 genes that were up-regulated at least 3-fold in epithelial ovarian cancers when compared with normal OSE. In addition, a panel of 11 genes known to encode potential tumor markers [mucin 1, transmembrane (MUC1), mucin 16 (CA125), mesothelin, WAP four-disulfide core domain 2 (HE4), kallikrein 6, kallikrein 10, matrix metalloproteinase 2, prostasin, osteopontin, tetranectin, and inhibin] were similarly analyzed.
RESULTS: The 3-fold up-regulated genes were examined and four genes [Notch homologue 3 (NOTCH3), E2F transcription factor 3 (E2F3), GTPase activating protein (RACGAP1), and hematological and neurological expressed 1 (HN1)] distinguished all tumor samples from normal OSE. The 3-fold up-regulated genes were analyzed using RDPA, and the combination of elevated claudin 3 (CLDN3) and elevated vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) distinguished the cancers from normal OSE. The 11 known markers were analyzed using RDPA, and a combination of HE4, CA125, and MUC1 expression could distinguish tumor from normal specimens. Expression at the mRNA level in the candidate markers was examined via semiquantitative reverse transcription-PCR and was found to correlate well with the array data. Immunohistochemistry was performed to identify expression of the genes at the protein level in 158 ovarian cancers of different histotypes. A combination of CLDN3, CA125, and MUC1 stained 157 (99.4%) of 158 cancers, and all of the tumors were detected with a combination of CLDN3, CA125, MUC1, and VEGF.
CONCLUSIONS: Our data are consistent with the possibility that a limited number of markers in combination might identify >99% of epithelial ovarian cancers despite the heterogeneity of the disease.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15161682     DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-03-0409

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


  161 in total

1.  The phosphoinositide 3-kinase regulatory subunit p85alpha can exert tumor suppressor properties through negative regulation of growth factor signaling.

Authors:  Cullen M Taniguchi; Jonathon Winnay; Tatsuya Kondo; Roderick T Bronson; Alexander R Guimaraes; José O Alemán; Ji Luo; Gregory Stephanopoulos; Ralph Weissleder; Lewis C Cantley; C Ronald Kahn
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2010-06-08       Impact factor: 12.701

2.  N-linked glycan structures and their expressions change in the blood sera of ovarian cancer patients.

Authors:  William R Alley; Jacqueline A Vasseur; John A Goetz; Martin Svoboda; Benjamin F Mann; Daniela E Matei; Nancy Menning; Ahmed Hussein; Yehia Mechref; Milos V Novotny
Journal:  J Proteome Res       Date:  2012-03-07       Impact factor: 4.466

3.  Atypical PKCiota contributes to poor prognosis through loss of apical-basal polarity and cyclin E overexpression in ovarian cancer.

Authors:  Astrid M Eder; Xiaomei Sui; Daniel G Rosen; Laura K Nolden; Kwai Wa Cheng; John P Lahad; Madhuri Kango-Singh; Karen H Lu; Carla L Warneke; Edward N Atkinson; Isabelle Bedrosian; Khandan Keyomarsi; Wen-lin Kuo; Joe W Gray; Jerry C P Yin; Jinsong Liu; Georg Halder; Gordon B Mills
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2005-08-22       Impact factor: 11.205

4.  Phosphorylation of claudin-4 by PKCepsilon regulates tight junction barrier function in ovarian cancer cells.

Authors:  Theresa D'Souza; Fred E Indig; Patrice J Morin
Journal:  Exp Cell Res       Date:  2007-07-13       Impact factor: 3.905

5.  Tight junction proteins claudin-3 and claudin-4 control tumor growth and metastases.

Authors:  Xiying Shang; Xinjian Lin; Edwin Alvarez; Gerald Manorek; Stephen B Howell
Journal:  Neoplasia       Date:  2012-10       Impact factor: 5.715

Review 6.  Pathogenesis of ovarian cancer: clues from selected overexpressed genes.

Authors:  Ie-Ming Shih; Ben Davidson
Journal:  Future Oncol       Date:  2009-12       Impact factor: 3.404

7.  Hematopoietic- and neurologic-expressed sequence 1 expression in the murine GL261 and high-grade human gliomas.

Authors:  Katharine M Laughlin; Defang Luo; Che Liu; Gerry Shaw; Kenneth H Warrington; Jingxin Qiu; Anthony T Yachnis; Jeffrey K Harrison
Journal:  Pathol Oncol Res       Date:  2009-09       Impact factor: 3.201

8.  Quantitation of circulating tumor cells in blood samples from ovarian and prostate cancer patients using tumor-specific fluorescent ligands.

Authors:  Wei He; Sumith A Kularatne; Kimberly R Kalli; Franklyn G Prendergast; Robert J Amato; George G Klee; Lynn C Hartmann; Philip S Low
Journal:  Int J Cancer       Date:  2008-10-15       Impact factor: 7.396

Review 9.  Epithelial Ovarian Cancer and the Immune System: Biology, Interactions, Challenges and Potential Advances for Immunotherapy.

Authors:  Anne M Macpherson; Simon C Barry; Carmela Ricciardelli; Martin K Oehler
Journal:  J Clin Med       Date:  2020-09-14       Impact factor: 4.241

10.  Expression profiling of the ovarian surface kinome reveals candidate genes for early neoplastic changes.

Authors:  Tanja Pejovic; Nupur T Pande; Motomi Mori; Paulette Mhawech-Fauceglia; Christina Harrington; Solange Mongoue-Tchokote; Daniel Dim; Christopher Andrews; Amy Beck; Yukie Tarumi; Jovana Djilas; Fabio Cappuccini; Otavia Caballero; Jiaqi Huang; Samuel Levy; Alexia Tsiamouri; Joanna Cain; Grover C Bagby; Robert L Strausberg; Andrew J Simpson; Kunle O Odunsi
Journal:  Transl Oncol       Date:  2009-12       Impact factor: 4.243

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