| Literature DB >> 24475377 |
Francesca Molinari1, Milo Frattini1.
Abstract
Phosphatase and TENsin homolog deleted on chromosome 10 (PTEN) is a tumor suppressor gene located at chromosome 10q23.31, encoding for a 403-amino acid protein that possesses both lipid and protein phosphatase activities. The main function of PTEN is to block the PI3K pathway by dephosphorylating phosphatidylinositol (PI) 3,4,5-triphosphate to PI-4,5-bisphosphate thus counteracting PI3K function. PTEN inactivation is a frequent event in many cancer types and can occur through various genetic alterations including point mutations, large chromosomal deletions, and epigenetic mechanisms. In colorectal cancer (CRC) PTEN is altered through mixed genetic/epigenetic mechanisms (typically: mutations and promoter hypermethylation or 10q23 LOH and promoter hypermethylation), which lead to the biallelic inactivation of the protein in 20-30% of cases. The role of PTEN as a prognostic and predictive factor in CRC has been addressed by relatively few works. This review is focused on the report and on the discussion of the studies investigating these aspects. Overall, at the moment, there are conflicting results and, therefore it has not been clarified whether PTEN might play a prognostic role in CRC. The same is valid also for the predictive role, leading to the fact that PTEN evaluation cannot be used in routinely diagnosis for the early identification of patients who might be addressed to the treatment with EGFR-targeted therapies, at odds with other genetic alterations belonging to EGFR-downstream pathways. The reason of discordant results may be attributable to several issues: (1) the size of the analyzed cohort, (2) patients inclusion criteria, (3) the methods of assessing PTEN alteration. In particular, there are no standardized methods to evaluate this marker, especially for immunohistochemistry, a technique suffering of intra and inter-observer variability due to the semi-quantitative character of such an analysis. In conclusion, much work, especially in large and homogeneous cohorts of cases from different laboratories, has to be done before the establishment of PTEN as prognostic or predictive marker in CRC.Entities:
Keywords: EGFR-targeted therapies; PTEN; colorectal cancer; immunohistochemistry; mutation; predictive; prognosis
Year: 2014 PMID: 24475377 PMCID: PMC3893597 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2013.00326
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1PTEN protein structure. PTEN is composed of 403-amino acids and contains: a N-terminal region of 185 aminoacids (1–185) composed by a PIP2-binding domain (PBD) and by a phosphatase domain of 218 aminoacid (186–403), and a C-terminal region composed by a C2 domain and by a C-terminal tail containing two PEST (proline, glutamic acid, serine, threonine) sequences, and a PDZ-interaction motif at the end.
Figure 2The PI3K-PTEN-Akt pathway. The main function of PTEN consists in the regulation of the PI3K/Akt/mTOR. In response to extracellular stimuli (e.g., presence of insulin, growth factors, chemokines), PI3K is activated by tyrosine kinase receptors or G-protein-coupled receptors and it phosphorylates PIP2 to generate PIP3 which in turn phosphorylates and activates Akt. PTEN is a lipid phosphatase that antagonizes the action of PI3K by dephosphorylating PIP3 to generate PIP2 (thus blocking the PI3K signaling cascade).
List of papers finding a positive correlation between PTEN loss and prognosis.
| Author | No. | Type of tissue | Method | % PTEN alteration |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dicuonzo et al. ( | 36 | Frozen CRC | Sequencing | 17% mutations |
| Nassif et al. ( | 41 | Frozen normal tissue and CRC | Sequencing, LOH, IHC | 19% mutations |
| 17% LOH | ||||
| 70% reduction or loss of expression (IHC) (cytoplasm and nuclear staining) | ||||
| Sawai et al. ( | 69 with liver metastasis; 70 without liver metastasis | FFPE CRC and liver metastasis | IHC | 75.4% weak expression (cytoplasm and nuclear staining) |
| Lin et al. ( | 139 | FFPE TMA CRC | IHC | 7% weak or loss expression (cytoplasm staining) |
| Li et al. ( | 327 | FFPE TMA CRC | Sequencing, IHC | 29% weak or loss of expression (PTEN immunoreactivity localized in the nucleus) |
| Jang et al. ( | 482 | FFPE TMA CRC | IHC | 50% loss of expression |
| Jin et al. ( | 68 | FFPE CRC | IHC | 67.6% loss of expression (cytoplasm and nuclear staining) |
| Atreya et al. ( | 56 | FFPE mCRC | IHC | 12.3% loss of expression (cytoplasm and nuclear staining) |
| Bohn et al. ( | 307 | FFPE TMA CRC | FISH | 8.8% gene loss |
No.: number of patients; CRC: colorectal cancer; FFPE: formalin-fixed paraffin embedded; FISH: fluorescent .
List of papers finding no correlation between PTEN loss and prognosis.
| Author | No. | Type of tissue | Method | % PTEN alteration |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Colakoglu et al. ( | 76 | FFPE CRC | IHC | 5% loss of expression; 67% weakly moderate positive expression (cytoplasm staining) |
| Eklöf et al. ( | 197 and 414 | FFPE CRC | IHC | 12.5 and 14% loss of expression (cytoplasm staining) |
| Price et al. ( | 302 | FFPE advanced CRC | Taqman copy number assay | 38.7% loss |
| Day et al. ( | 1093 | FFPE stage I-IV CRC | Sequencing | 5.8% mutations |
*Separate cohort; No.: number of patients; CRC: colorectal cancer; FFPE: formalin-fixed paraffin embedded; IHC: immunohistochemistry.
List of papers investigating the predictive role of PTEN in CRC treated with EGFR-targeted therapies cetuximab or panitumumab.
| Author | No. | Type of tissue | Method | % PTEN alteration and clinical response |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Frattini et al. ( | 27 | FFPE mCRC | IHC | 100% PTEN-negative patients were NR ( |
| Sartore-Bianchi et al. ( | 81 | FFPE mCRC | IHC | 97% PTEN-negative patients were NR ( |
| Perrone et al. ( | 32 | FFPE mCRC | Sequencing, FISH | All patients with a decreased |
| Razis et al. ( | 72 | FFPE mCRC | IHC and FISH | PTEN gene deletion detected only by FISH associated with no response |
| Loupakis et al. ( | 102 | FFPE mCRC (primary and metastatic lesion) | IHC | 95% PTEN-negative patients were NR. Association with clinical response found only in the metastatic lesion |
| Negri et al. ( | 50 | FFPE mCRC (primary and metastatic lesion) | Immunofluorescence | 100% PTEN-negative patients were NR ( |
| Tol et al. ( | 559 | FFPE mCRC | IHC | Loss of PTEN expression observed in 42% but not associated with response |
| Ulivi et al. ( | 67 | FFPE mCRC | IHC | Loss of PTEN expression observed in 60% but not associated with response |
| Laurent-Puig et al. ( | 162 | FFPE mCRC | IHC | Loss of PTEN expression observed in 19% but not associated with response |
No: number of patients; CRC: colorectal cancer; FFPE: formalin-fixed paraffin embedded; FISH: fluorescent .