Literature DB >> 26202067

The prognostic value of SUMO1/Sentrin specific peptidase 1 (SENP1) in prostate cancer is limited to ERG-fusion positive tumors lacking PTEN deletion.

Christoph Burdelski1, Devi Menan2, Maria Christina Tsourlakis3, Martina Kluth4, Claudia Hube-Magg5, Nathaniel Melling6, Sarah Minner7, Christina Koop8, Markus Graefen9, Hans Heinzer10, Corinna Wittmer11, Guido Sauter12, Ronald Simon13, Thorsten Schlomm14,15, Stefan Steurer16, Till Krech17.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Posttranscriptional protein modification by SUMOylation plays an important role in tumor development and progression. In the current study we analyzed prevalence and prognostic impact of the de-SUMOylation enzyme SENP1 in prostate cancer.
METHODS: SENP1 expression was analyzed by immunohistochemistry on a tissue microarray containing more than 12,400 prostate cancer specimens. Results were compared to tumor phenotype, ERG status, genomic deletions of 3p, 5q, 6q and PTEN, and biochemical recurrence.
RESULTS: SENP1 immunostaining was detectable in 34.5 % of 9,516 interpretable cancers and considered strong in 7.3 %, moderate in 14.9 % and weak in 12.3 % of cases. Strong SENP1 expression was linked to advanced pT stage (p < 0.0001), high Gleason grade (p < 0.0001), positive lymph node status (p = 0.0019), high pre-operative PSA levels (p = 0.0037), and PSA recurrence (p < 0.0001). SENP1 expression was strongly associated with positive ERG fusion status as determined by both in situ hybridization (FISH) and immunohistochemistry as well as with PTEN deletions. Detectable SENP1 immunostaining was found in 41 % of ERG positive and in 47 % of PTEN deleted cancers but in only 30 % of ERG negative and 30 % of PTEN non-deleted cancers (p < 0.0001 each). Deletions of 3p, 5q, and 6q were unrelated to SENP1 expression. Subset analyses revealed that the prognostic impact of SENP1 expression was solely driven by the subgroup of ERG positive, PTEN undeleted cancers. In this subgroup, the prognostic role of SENP1 expression was independent of the preoperative PSA level, tumor stage, Gleason grade, and the status of the resection margin.
CONCLUSIONS: SENP1 expression has strong prognostic impact in a molecularly defined subset of cancers. This is per se not surprising as the biologic impact of each individual molecular event is likely to be dependent on its cellular environment. However, such findings challenge the concept of finding clinically relevant molecular signatures that are equally applicable to all prostate cancers.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26202067      PMCID: PMC4512145          DOI: 10.1186/s12885-015-1555-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMC Cancer        ISSN: 1471-2407            Impact factor:   4.430


Background

Prostate cancer is the most prevalent cancer in men in Western societies [1]. Although most prostate cancers have a rather indolent clinical course, this disease still represents the third most common cause of cancer related death in men. A reliable distinction between the indolent and the aggressive forms of the disease is highly desirable to enhance therapeutic decisions. Despite recent advances, the only established pretreatment prognostic parameters currently include Gleason grade and tumor extent on biopsies, preoperative prostate-specific antigen (PSA), and clinical stage. Because these data are statistically powerful but not sufficient for optimal individual treatment decisions, it can be hoped that a better understanding of disease biology will eventually lead to the identification of clinically applicable molecular markers that enable a more reliable prediction of prostate cancer aggressiveness. SUMOylation is a revertible posttranscriptional protein modification involving the binding of small ubiquitin-like modifiers (SUMOs) to target proteins. SUMOs are structurally related to ubiquitin and are covalently attached to target proteins by a SUMO-conjugating system resembling the ubiquitination machinery [2]. SUMOylation affects protein stability and activity, and regulates a variety of cellular processes, such as nuclear transport, transcription, and apoptosis [3]. Several proteins control the balance between SUMOylation and de-SUMOylation. A key protein for de-SUMOylation is SUMO1/Sentrin specific peptidase 1 (SENP1) [4], which deconjugates SUMOs from a large number of SUMOylated proteins [5]. Since important target genes of SENP1 include histone deacetylases and cell cycle regulators like cyclin D1, SENP1 is also involved in control of epigenetic transcription and cell proliferation [6-10]. Consequently, overexpression of SENP1 has been found in various cancer types [10], such as colon cancer [11], bladder cancer [12], head & neck cancer [13], and lung cancer [14], and has been linked to poor clinical features in some of these [13, 15]. In the prostate gland, SENP1 was shown to act as a transcriptional activator of androgen receptor (AR) signaling [7]. Two studies analyzing SENP1 in 115 and 150 Asian prostate cancer patients suggested that SENP1 overexpression might be an independent marker of poor prognosis [16, 17]. These promising findings prompted us to study the putative prognostic value of SENP1 expression measurement in a large cohort including more than 12,400 European prostate cancers that have been assembled in a tissue microarray (TMA) format. The database attached to our TMA contains pathological and clinical follow-up data, as well molecular data of key molecular alterations of this disease such as ERG fusion and genomic deletion of PTEN, 3p13, 5q21, and 6q15, which were used to establish associations between SENP1 expression and distinct phenotypic and molecular subsets of prostate cancers.

Methods

Patients

Radical prostatectomy specimens were available from 12,427 patients, undergoing surgery between 1992 and 2012 at the Department of Urology and the Martini Clinics at the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf. Follow-up data were available for a total of 11,665 patients with a median follow-up of 36 months (range: 1 to 241 months; Table 1). Prostate specific antigen (PSA) values were measured following surgery and PSA recurrence was defined as a postoperative PSA of ≥ 0.2 ng/ml confirmed by a second determination with a serum PSA ≥ 0.2 ng/ml. All prostate specimens were analyzed according to a standard procedure, including a complete embedding of the entire prostate for histological analysis [18].
Table 1

Pathological and clinical data of the arrayed prostate cancers. Percentage in the column “Study cohort on TMA” refers to the fraction of samples across each category. Percentage in column “Biochemical relapse among categories” refers to the fraction of samples with biochemical relapse within each parameter in the different categories. Numbers do not always add up to 12,427 in the different categories because of cases with missing data. Abbreviation: AJCC, American Joint Committee on Cancer

No. of patients (%)
Study cohort on TMA (n = 12427)Biochemical relapse among categories
Follow-up (mo)
n11665 (93.9 %)2769 (23.7 %)
Mean48.9-
Median36.4-
Age (y)
≤50334 (2.7 %)81 (24.3 %)
51-593061 (24.8 %)705 (23 %)
60-697188 (58.2 %)1610 (22.4 %)
≥701761 (14.3 %)370 (21 %)
Pretreatment PSA (ng/ml)
<41585 (12.9 %)242 (15.3 %)
4-107480 (60.9 %)1355 (18.1 %)
10-202412 (19.6 %)737 (30.6 %)
>20812 (6.6 %)397 (48.9 %)
pT category (AJCC 2002)
pT28187 (66.2 %)1095 (13.4 %)
pT3a2660 (21.5 %)817 (30.7 %)
pT3b1465 (11.8 %)796 (54.3 %)
pT463 (0.5 %)51 (81 %)
Gleason grade
≤3 + 32983 (24.1 %)368 (12.3 %)
3 + 46945 (56.2 %)1289 (18.6 %)
4 + 31848 (15 %)788 (42.6 %)
≥4 + 4584 (4.7 %)311 (53.3 %)
pN category
pN06970 (91 %)1636 (23.5 %)
pN+693 (9 %)393 (56.7 %)
Surgical margin
Negative9990 (81.9 %)1848 (18.5 %)
Positive2211 (18.1 %)853 (38.6 %)
Pathological and clinical data of the arrayed prostate cancers. Percentage in the column “Study cohort on TMA” refers to the fraction of samples across each category. Percentage in column “Biochemical relapse among categories” refers to the fraction of samples with biochemical relapse within each parameter in the different categories. Numbers do not always add up to 12,427 in the different categories because of cases with missing data. Abbreviation: AJCC, American Joint Committee on Cancer The TMA manufacturing process was described earlier in detail [19]. In short, one 0.6 mm core was taken from a representative tissue block from each patient. The tissues were distributed among 27 TMA blocks, each containing 144 to 522 tumor samples. For internal controls, each TMA block also contained various control tissues, including normal prostate tissue. The molecular database attached to this TMA contained results on ERG expression in 10,711 [20], ERG break apart FISH analysis in 7,122 (expanded from [21]) and deletion status of 5q21 (CHD1) in 7932 (expanded from [22]), 6q15 (MAP3K7) in 6,069 (expanded from [23]), 10q23 (PTEN) in 6,704 (expanded from [24]) and 3p13 (FOXP1) in 7,081 (expanded from [25]) cancers. Immunohistochemical data on Ki67 labeling index (LI) were available from 7,010 cancers (expanded from [26]). The usage of archived diagnostic left-over tissues for manufacturing of tissue microarrays and their analysis for research purposes as well as patient data analysis has been approved by the local ethics committee (Ethics commission Hamburg, WF-049/09 and PV3652). All work has been carried out in compliance with the Helsinki Declaration. Usage of patient data and routinely archived formalin fixed left-over patient tissue samples for research purposes by the attending physician is approved by local laws and does not require written consent (HmbKHG, §12,1).

Immunohistochemistry

Freshly cut TMA sections were immunostained on one day and in one experiment. Slides were deparaffinized and exposed to heat-induced antigen retrieval for 5 min in an autoclave at 121 °C in pH 7.8 Tris-EDTA-Citrate buffer. Primary antibody specific for SENP1 (rabbit monoclonal antibody, EPR3844, Abcam, Cambridge, UK; cat#108981; dilution 1:150) was applied at 37 °C for 60 min. Bound antibody was then visualized using the EnVision Kit (Dako, Glostrup, Denmark) according to the manufacturer’s directions. Staining was predominantly nuclear and typically accompanied by cytoplasmic co-staining. The intensity of the cytoplasmic staining was usually weaker than the intensity of nuclear staining. Nuclear and cytoplasmic SENP1 staining was typically found in either all (100 %) or none (0 %) of the tumor cells in a given cancer spot. Staining intensity of all cases was thus semi-quantitatively assessed in four categories: negative, weak, moderate and strong. The percentage of positive tumor cells (typically 100 %) was not separately recorded. An additional isotype control (rabbit monoclonal, SP137, Abcam, Cambridge, UK; cat#128142) yielded no unspecific staining (data not shown).

Statistics

For statistical analysis, the JMP® 10.0.2 software (2012 SAS Institute Inc., NC, USA) was used. Contingency tables were calculated to study association between SENP1 staining and clinico-pathological variables, and the Chi-squared (Likelihood) test was used to find significant relationships. Kaplan Meier curves were generated for PSA recurrence free survival. The log-Rank test was applied to test the significance of differences between stratified survival functions. Cox proportional hazards regression analysis was performed to test the statistical independence and significance between pathological, molecular, and clinical variables.

Results

Technical issues

A total of 9,516 (77 %) of tumor samples were interpretable in our TMA analysis. Reason for non-informative cases (2,911 spots; 23 %) included lack of tissue samples or absence of unequivocal cancer tissue in the TMA spot.

SENP1 immunohistochemistry

In normal prostatic glands, weak cytoplasmic staining was found in almost all cases, whereas nuclear staining was rare and occurred in only two out of 20 (10 %) cases. Positive staining was limited to the secretory epithelial cells, while basal cells were consistently negative. In cancers, SENP1 immunostaining was predominantly localized in the nucleus. Positive staining was seen in 3,283 of our 9,516 (34.5 %) interpretable tumors and was considered weak in 12.3 %, moderate in 14.9 % and strong in 7.3 % of cancers. Representative images of positive and negative SENP1 immunostainings are given in Fig. 1. Strong SENP1 immunostaining was significantly linked to advanced pathological tumor stage (p < 0.0001), high Gleason grade (p < 0.0001), presence of lymph node metastases (p = 0.0019) and high preoperative PSA-levels (p = 0.0037) when all tumors were jointly analyzed (Table 2). SENP1 immunostaining showed no significant association with positive resection margin status (p = 0.3216).
Fig. 1

Representative pictures of SENP1 immunostaining in prostate cancer with a) negative, b) weak, c) moderate, and d) strong staining

Table 2

Association between SENP1 immunostaining results and prostate cancer phenotype in all cancers

ParameterSENP1p value
n evaluableNegative (%)Weak (%)Moderate (%)Strong (%)
All cancers9,51665.512.314.97.3
Tumor stage <0.0001
pT26,14368.211.114.16.6
pT3a2,13761.813.715.98.7
pT3b-41,20358.115.817.68.5
Gleason grade <0.0001
≤3 + 32,13572.59.211.66.7
3 + 45,45165.311.715.57.5
4 + 31,44558.416.217.67.8
≥4 + 444258.120.814.96.1
Lymph node metastasis 0.0019
N05,47262.312.616.68.5
N+52656.818.417.57.2
Preop. PSA level (ng/ml) 0.0037
<4116064.212.215.97.6
4-10570266.811.215.07.0
10-20189263.414.614.57.5
>2066662.314.914.38.6
Surgical margin 0.3216
negative7,54965.912.114.97.1
positive1,79763.813.015.28.0
Representative pictures of SENP1 immunostaining in prostate cancer with a) negative, b) weak, c) moderate, and d) strong staining Association between SENP1 immunostaining results and prostate cancer phenotype in all cancers

Association with TMPRSS2:ERG fusion status and ERG protein expression

To evaluate whether SENP1 expression is associated with ERG status in prostate cancers, we used data from previous studies (expanded from [20, 21]). Data on TMPRSS2:ERG fusion status obtained by FISH were available from 5,677 and by immunohistochemistry from 8,459 tumors with evaluable SENP1 immunostaining. Data on both ERG FISH and IHC were available from 5,468 cancers, and an identical result (ERG IHC positive and break by FISH or ERG IHC negative and missing break by FISH) was found in 5,231 of 5,468 (95.7 %) cancers. SENP1 immunostaining was slightly more frequent in TMPRSS2:ERG rearranged and ERG positive prostate cancers than in ERG negative tumors. Positive SENP1 immunostaining was seen in 41.7 % (ERG IHC) and 40.9 % (ERG FISH) of ERG positive cancers but in only 28.6 % and 30 % of cancers without ERG staining and ERG rearrangement, respectively (p < 0.0001 each; Fig. 2). SENP1 immunostaining was similarly linked to unfavorable tumor features in subsets of both ERG negative and ERG positive cancers (Additional file 1: Table S1 and Additional file 2: Table S2).
Fig. 2

Association between SENP1 immunostaining results and the ERG-status determined by IHC and FISH analysis. Rearranged indicates breakage of the ERG gene according to FISH analysis

Association between SENP1 immunostaining results and the ERG-status determined by IHC and FISH analysis. Rearranged indicates breakage of the ERG gene according to FISH analysis

Association to other key genomic deletions

Earlier studies had provided evidence for recurrent chromosomal deletions delineating further molecular subgroups amongst ERG positive and ERG negative prostate cancers. In particular, deletions of PTEN and 3p13 define subgroups in ERG positive and deletions of 5q21 and 6q15 define subgroups in ERG negative cancers [22, 23, 25]. To examine, whether SENP1 expression might be particularly associated with one of these genomic deletions, SENP1 data were compared to preexisting findings on PTEN (10q23), 3p13 (FOXP1), 6q15 (MAP3K7) and 5q21 (CHD1) deletions. Elevated SENP1 expression levels were strongly linked to deletions of PTEN both in ERG positive and ERG negative cancers (p < 0.0001 each, Fig. 3). However, SENP1 was largely unrelated to all other deletions irrespective of whether all cancers or subgroups of ERG positive or ERG negative cancers were analyzed.
Fig. 3

Association between positive SENP1 immunostaining results and deletions of PTEN, 5q21 (CHD1), 6q15 (MAP3K7), and 3p13 (FOXP1) in all cancers as well as the subsets of ERG-negative and ERG-positive cancers according to ERG-IHC analysis

Association between positive SENP1 immunostaining results and deletions of PTEN, 5q21 (CHD1), 6q15 (MAP3K7), and 3p13 (FOXP1) in all cancers as well as the subsets of ERG-negative and ERG-positive cancers according to ERG-IHC analysis

Association to tumor cell proliferation (Ki67LI)

Strong SENP1 staining was significantly linked to accelerated cell proliferation as measured by Ki67LI in all cancers (p < 0.0001). This association held also true with high significance in most subgroups of cancers with identical Gleason grade (≤3 + 3; 3 + 4; 4 + 3; ≥4 + 4), and also in the subset of ERG positive tumors lacking PTEN deletions (p = 0.0315). All comparisons with the Ki67LI are summarized in Table 3.
Table 3

Associations between SENP1 immunohistochemistry results and cell proliferation as measured by Ki67 immunohistochemistry in all cancers and subsets of cancers defined by Gleason grade, and the ERG/PTEN status. Ki67LIav = average Ki67 labeling index. * P-value for SENP1 negative vs. positive (combined groups of weak, moderate, strong)

SENP1 IHCNumberKi67LI av P
All cancersnegative3,8802.58±0.04
weak6793.05±0.10<0.0001
moderate8383.31±0.09* < 0.0001
strong4193.21±0.13
Gleason≤3 + 3negative9802.07±0.07
weak1122.30±0.19<0.0001
moderate1372.55±0.18* < 0.0001
strong752.65±0.24
3 + 4negative2,2382.51±0.05
weak3963.02±0.12<0.0001
moderate5203.14±0.10* < 0.0001
strong2523.24±0.15
4 + 3negative5043.34±0.16
weak1193.69±0.320.4329
moderate1373.85±0.30*0.1209
strong713.56±0.42
≥4 + 4negative1334.74±0.39
weak513.41±0.630.0516
moderate415.90±0.70*0.5643
strong183.78±1.06
ERG-positive cancers without PTEN deletionnegative8142.92±0.09
weak1513.44±0.210.0315
moderate1962.99±0.19*0.0293
strong803.59±0.29
Associations between SENP1 immunohistochemistry results and cell proliferation as measured by Ki67 immunohistochemistry in all cancers and subsets of cancers defined by Gleason grade, and the ERG/PTEN status. Ki67LIav = average Ki67 labeling index. * P-value for SENP1 negative vs. positive (combined groups of weak, moderate, strong)

Association with PSA recurrence

Follow-up data were available from 8,920 patients with interpretable SENP1 immunostaining on the TMA. Since there was no significant prognostic impact of the level of positive SENP1 staining (data not shown), all cancers with weak, moderate, and strong SENP1 staining were combined into one group (“positive”) for follow-up analysis. Tumors with positive SENP1 immunostaining showed a significantly shortened PSA recurrence-free interval if all cancers were jointly analyzed (p < 0.0001, Fig. 4a), as well as in subsets of ERG-IHC-positive (p < 0.0001, Fig. 4b) or ERG-IHC-negative cancers p < 0.0001, Fig. 4c). Because of the strong link between SENP1 expression and PTEN deletion, we extended the analyses to tumor subgroups stratified according to the SENP1/ PTEN status. These analyses revealed that the prognostic impact of SENP1 expression was limited to cancers lacking PTEN deletions in ERG positive (p < 0.0001 Fig. 4d), but not in ERG negative tumors (p = 0.1251, Fig. 4e). SENP1 had no prognostic relevance in cancers harboring PTEN deletions, neither in ERG positive (p = 0.7745, Fig. 4d), nor in ERG negative cancers (p = 0.7267, Fig. 4e).
Fig. 4

Association between SENP1 expression and biochemical recurrence in a) all cancers, b) ERG-IHC positive cancers, c) ERG-IHC negative cancers. Combined effect of SENP1 and PTEN deletion in d) all cancers, e) ERG-IHC positive cancers and f) ERG-IHC negative cancers

Association between SENP1 expression and biochemical recurrence in a) all cancers, b) ERG-IHC positive cancers, c) ERG-IHC negative cancers. Combined effect of SENP1 and PTEN deletion in d) all cancers, e) ERG-IHC positive cancers and f) ERG-IHC negative cancers

Multivariate analysis

Four different types of multivariate analyses were performed evaluating the clinical relevance of SENP1 expression in different scenarios (Table 4). Scenario 1 evaluated all postoperatively available parameters including pathological tumor stage, pathological lymph node status (pN), surgical margin status, preoperative PSA value and pathological Gleason grade obtained after the morphological evaluation of the entire resected prostate. In scenario 2, all postoperatively available parameters with exception of nodal status were included. The rational for this approach was that the indication and extent of lymph node dissection is not standardized in the surgical therapy of prostate cancer and that excluding pN in multivariate analysis can markedly increase case numbers. Two additional scenarios had the purpose to model the preoperative situation as much as possible. Scenario 3 included SENP1 expression, preoperative PSA, clinical tumor stage (cT stage) and Gleason grade obtained on the prostatectomy specimen. Since postoperative determination of a tumors Gleason grade is “better” than the preoperatively determined Gleason grade (subjected to sampling errors and consequently under-grading in more than one third of cases [27]), another multivariate analysis was added. In scenario 4, the preoperative Gleason grade obtained on the original biopsy was combined with preoperative PSA, cT stage and SENP1 expression. SENP1 largely did not provide independent prognostic information if all tumors or the subgroups of ERG positive and ERG negative cancers were interrogated. A further subset analysis of ERG positive/PTEN undeleted cancers revealed independent prognostic impact, however, in 3 of 4 tested scenarios (Table 4 a-d).
Table 4

Multivariate analysis including SENP1 expression in a) all cancers, b) ERG-negative, c) ERG-positive cancers and d) ERG-positive cancers lacking PTEN deletion

a)
Scenarion analyzablep -value
Preoperative PSA-LevelpT StagecT StageGleason grade prostatectomyGleason grade biopsyN-StageR-StatusSENP1 Expression
15,273<0.0001<0.0001-<0.0001-0.00010.00080.9255
28,392<0.0001<0.0001-<0.0001--<0.00010.9136
38,268<0.0001-<0.0001<0.0001---0.6842
48,155<0.0001-<0.0001-<0.0001--0.0227
b)
Scenarion analyzablep -value
Preoperative PSA-LevelpT StagecT StageGleason-grade prostatectomyGleason grade biopsyN-StageR-StatusSENP1 Expression
12,6810.0004<0.0001-<0.0001-0.00060.13750.1487
24,179<0.0001<0.0001-<0.0001--0.00220.1962
34,145<0.0001-<0.0001<0.0001---0.3180
44,091<0.0001-<0.0001-<0.0001--0.3539
c)
Scenarion analyzablep -value
preoperative PSA-LevelpT StagecT StageGleason-grade prostatectomyGleason grade biopsyN-StageR-StatusSENP1 Expression
12,0900.0003<0.0001-<0.0001-0.00730.00650.4108
23,279<0.0001<0.0001-<0.0001--<0.00010.4351
33,203<0.0001-<0.0001<0.0001---0.3231
43,156<0.0001-<0.0001-<0.0001--0.0143
d)
Scenarion analyzablep -value
preoperative PSA-LevelpT StagecT StageGleason-grade prostatectomyGleason grade biopsyN-StageR-StatusSENP1 Expression
18720.0015<0.0001-<0.0001-0.00070.09580.1174
21,4950.0012<0.0001-<0.0001--0.00170.0157
31,463<0.0001-0.0197<0.0001---0.0057
41,444<0.0001-0.0354-<0.0001--0.0005
Multivariate analysis including SENP1 expression in a) all cancers, b) ERG-negative, c) ERG-positive cancers and d) ERG-positive cancers lacking PTEN deletion

Discussion

Immunohistochemically detectable SENP1 expression was found in about 35 % of prostate cancers in our study. This frequency is lower than what has been observed in two earlier IHC studies, reporting positive SENP1 staining in 76.5 % of 115 [16] and high SENP1 expression in 47 % of 117 [17] analyzed prostate cancers from Asian patients. These earlier studies also analyzed tissue microarrays. Although both previous studies utilized a slightly larger core diameter (1 mm) than in our study (0.6 mm), it seems unlikely that the lower fraction of SENP1 positive cancers in our study was caused by sampling bias due to this small difference in core diameter. Rather, different antibodies, immunohistochemistry protocols, and scoring criteria might have contributed to the slightly variable results between these studies. Given the paramount impact of IHC protocols on the positivity rates in TMA studies [18] we would not view our data as strong evidence in favor of possible ethnical differences in SENP1 expression in prostate cancers. Our analysis revealed weak cytoplasmic SENP1 staining in secretory cells of normal prostate epithelium, while more intense cytoplasmic and nuclear staining was rare and occurred in only about 10 % of normal tissues. Finding a markedly higher fraction of cytoplasmic/nuclear SENP1 staining in cancer as compared to normal prostate suggests that SENP1 becomes upregulated in a fraction of tumors. Comparable to our observation, Li et al. [16] reported a gradual increase of SENP1 positivity from normal prostate (4.2 %) to prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia (PIN, 57.9 %) and cancer (76.5 %). SENP1 expression was significantly linked to adverse tumor features including advanced stage, high Gleason grade, and presence of lymph node metastases, preoperative PSA levels, and early biochemical recurrence in our analysis. These findings are in line with earlier studies in prostate cancer reporting significant associations with advanced and high-grade cancers as well as poor prognosis in Asian patients [16, 17]. Similar results have also been observed in analyses of other solid cancer types, including cancers of the colon [11], bladder [12], head & neck [13], and lung [14], where SENP1 overexpression was consistently linked to advanced and high-grade cancers and in some studies also with adverse clinical outcome [11, 13]. A relevant tumor biological role of SENP1 is also supported by our observation that SENP1 expression was linked to increased cell proliferation. Known biological functions of SENP1 are consistent with a role in cancer development and progression. SENP1 activity affects the homeostasis of post-transcriptional SUMO modification of various target proteins required for normal cell physiology. While both loss of SUMO conjugation as well as excessive SUMOylation results in embryonic lethality [28, 29], more subtle changes of the SUMOylation machinery lead to deregulation of multiple cellular pathways including those with relevance for cell proliferation and differentiation [10]. Genes and pathways known to be targeted by SENP1 include histone deacetylases [7], c-Jun- and ERK-dependent transcription [30, 31], cyclin D1 activity [32], Pi3K/AKT signaling pathway [33, 34], and HIF1α-dependent angiogenesis [29]. The high number of tumors in our TMA enabled us to profoundly evaluate SENP1 in the context of key genomic alterations of prostate cancer. Gene fusions involving the androgen-regulated serine protease TMPRSS2 and ERG, a member of the ETS family of transcription factors, occur in about 50 % of prostate cancers and result in strong AR-driven ERG protein overexpression [35, 36] and massive transcriptional changes [37-40]. The increased SENP1 expression levels in ERG positive cancers detected by two independent approaches (i.e. ERG-IHC and -FISH) in our study apparently reflects the AR dependency of both SENP1 and ERG, since SENP1 functions both as a transcriptional target as well as an inducer of AR expression in a positive feedback loop [32, 41]. Further subgroup analyses targeted highly recurrent chromosomal deletions that are tightly linked to the ERG status and that may delineate important molecular subgroups within ERG positive and ERG negative cancers. For example, 3p13 and PTEN deletions are linked to ERG positivity and deletions at 5q21 and 6q15 to ERG negativity and all these deletions have high prognostic impact within these subgroups [23–25, 42–44]. This analysis revealed that SENP1 expression was not only linked to a positive ERG status but to an even stronger extent to PTEN deletions. The classical function of PTEN involves control of the PI3K/AKT signaling pathway by antagonizing PI3K activity [45]. A functional relationship of PTEN and SENP1 is conceivable because SENP1 induced SUMOylation is known to occur and to have biological impact in the PTEN/PI3K/AKT signaling pathway [33, 34]. Comparison of large enough molecularly defined subgroups with clinical data is one approach to further interrogate functional interrelationships “in vivo”. The complete lack of a difference in clinical outcome between PTEN deleted cancers with and without SENP1 expression argues against a clinically relevant cooperative effect of reduced PTEN function and SENP1 activation. The very strong association between SENP1 overexpression and PTEN would, however, be consistent with models suggesting a role of SENP1 activation for development of PTEN deletions. This could be driven by the effect of SENP1 on histone modification and its impact on the epigenetic machinery. Both histone configuration and epigenetic events are thought to predispose to the development of specific genomic alterations including deletions [46-48]. In such a scenario, the additional PTEN deletion would result in such a strong disruption of cancer cell physiology that SENP1 expression no longer has a critical additional effect on tumor aggressiveness. The overall prognostic impact of SENP1 expression was – although statistically highly significant - rather small in absolute numbers. Several models for multivariate analyses were used in this study in order to - as much as possible - model the application of prognostic features in pre- and postoperative scenarios. Unfortunately, in the real world, prognostic molecular features can hardly be analyzed on preoperative biopsies because these are typically distributed among many different pathology laboratories, and even if they were available for analyses such precious collection of tissues would be used up after only a few studies. The application of multivariate models revealed that SENP1 largely lacked independent prognostic value if all tumors and the classical molecular subgroups of ERG positive and ERG negative cancers were analyzed. However, our subgroup analyses demonstrated that the significant impact of SENP1 expression on outcome was entirely driven by the subgroup of ERG positive PTEN non-deleted cancers. Accordingly, independent prognostic relevance was seen for SENP1 expression in this particular subgroup. In earlier studies, we have identified other molecular markers that seemed to exert their prognostic impact only in specific molecularly defined subgroups such as in ERG positive and PTEN deleted cancers [49, 50], ERG negative cancers lacking PTEN deletion [51], ERG positive cancers [25], ERG negative cancers [52], cancers lacking PTEN deletion [53, 54], or in all cancers irrespective of ERG and PTEN status [55]. The frequent finding of subtype specific prognostic features challenges the concept of molecular classifiers that apply to all prostate cancers. For example, several multiparametric prognostic tests were recently suggested in prostate cancer [56-59] and several tests are now commercially available to patients [60, 61]. It might be interesting to see, how these tests perform in molecularly defined prostate cancer subgroups. With SENP1 being one of the most important de-SUMOylating enzymes, it has been hypothesized that targeting SENP1 with inhibitory drugs may restore the balance of the SUMO modification system [10], and several experimental SENP1 specific inhibitors have been successfully designed as to yet [8, 62–64]. Such inhibitors may even cooperate with other treatment modalities that are commonly used in prostate cancer. Recently, Wang et al. used RNAi for depletion of SENP1 in lung cancer cell lines and found that inhibition of SENP1 markedly enhanced the radiosensitivity of lung carcinoma by promoting irradiation-induced cell cycle arrest, γ-H2AX expression and apoptosis [14]. Although clinical studies are so far lacking, these first attempts emphasize the potential druggability of SENP1 in human cancers. Given that prostate cancer is characterized by AR-driven SENP1 expression, it is possible that drugs targeting SENP1, possibly in combination with anti-androgenic therapy, will also be effective in prostate cancer.

Conclusions

Overall, our study demonstrates that SENP1 overexpression is frequent in ERG positive prostate cancer and linked to PTEN deletions. Moreover, SENP1 overexpression has strong prognostic value in the subset of ERG-positive prostate cancers lacking PTEN deletions.
  64 in total

Review 1.  Concepts in sumoylation: a decade on.

Authors:  Ruth Geiss-Friedlander; Frauke Melchior
Journal:  Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol       Date:  2007-12       Impact factor: 94.444

2.  SENP1 deficiency promotes ER stress-induced apoptosis by increasing XBP1 SUMOylation.

Authors:  Zhou Jiang; Qiuju Fan; Zhening Zhang; Yanqiong Zou; Rong Cai; Qi Wang; Yong Zuo; Jinke Cheng
Journal:  Cell Cycle       Date:  2012-03-15       Impact factor: 4.534

3.  L-arginine:glycine amidinotransferase deficiency protects from metabolic syndrome.

Authors:  Chi-un Choe; Christine Nabuurs; Malte C Stockebrand; Axel Neu; Patricia Nunes; Fabio Morellini; Kathrin Sauter; Stefan Schillemeit; Irm Hermans-Borgmeyer; Bart Marescau; Arend Heerschap; Dirk Isbrandt
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  2012-10-01       Impact factor: 6.150

4.  Genomic deletion of PTEN is associated with tumor progression and early PSA recurrence in ERG fusion-positive and fusion-negative prostate cancer.

Authors:  Antje Krohn; Tobias Diedler; Lia Burkhardt; Pascale-Sophie Mayer; Colin De Silva; Marie Meyer-Kornblum; Darja Kötschau; Pierre Tennstedt; Joseph Huang; Clarissa Gerhäuser; Malte Mader; Stefan Kurtz; Hüseyin Sirma; Fred Saad; Thomas Steuber; Markus Graefen; Christoph Plass; Guido Sauter; Ronald Simon; Sarah Minner; Thorsten Schlomm
Journal:  Am J Pathol       Date:  2012-06-13       Impact factor: 4.307

5.  Low level HER2 overexpression is associated with rapid tumor cell proliferation and poor prognosis in prostate cancer.

Authors:  Sarah Minner; Birte Jessen; Lars Stiedenroth; Eike Burandt; Jens Köllermann; Martina Mirlacher; Andreas Erbersdobler; Christian Eichelberg; Margit Fisch; Tim Henrik Brümmendorf; Carsten Bokemeyer; Ronald Simon; Thomas Steuber; Markus Graefen; Hartwig Huland; Guido Sauter; Thorsten Schlomm
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2010-02-23       Impact factor: 12.531

6.  Genomic profiling reveals alternative genetic pathways of prostate tumorigenesis.

Authors:  Jacques Lapointe; Chunde Li; Craig P Giacomini; Keyan Salari; Stephanie Huang; Pei Wang; Michelle Ferrari; Tina Hernandez-Boussard; James D Brooks; Jonathan R Pollack
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2007-09-15       Impact factor: 12.701

7.  The prognostic impact of high Nijmegen breakage syndrome (NBS1) gene expression in ERG-negative prostate cancers lacking PTEN deletion is driven by KPNA2 expression.

Authors:  Katharina Grupp; Rebecca Boumesli; Maria Christina Tsourlakis; Christina Koop; Waldemar Wilczak; Meike Adam; Guido Sauter; Ronald Simon; Jakob Robert Izbicki; Markus Graefen; Hartwig Huland; Stefan Steurer; Thorsten Schlomm; Sarah Minner; Alexander Quaas
Journal:  Int J Cancer       Date:  2014-02-26       Impact factor: 7.396

8.  Validation of a cell-cycle progression gene panel to improve risk stratification in a contemporary prostatectomy cohort.

Authors:  Matthew R Cooperberg; Jeffry P Simko; Janet E Cowan; Julia E Reid; Azita Djalilvand; Satish Bhatnagar; Alexander Gutin; Jerry S Lanchbury; Gregory P Swanson; Steven Stone; Peter R Carroll
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2013-03-04       Impact factor: 44.544

9.  Discovery and validation of a prostate cancer genomic classifier that predicts early metastasis following radical prostatectomy.

Authors:  Nicholas Erho; Anamaria Crisan; Ismael A Vergara; Anirban P Mitra; Mercedeh Ghadessi; Christine Buerki; Eric J Bergstralh; Thomas Kollmeyer; Stephanie Fink; Zaid Haddad; Benedikt Zimmermann; Thomas Sierocinski; Karla V Ballman; Timothy J Triche; Peter C Black; R Jeffrey Karnes; George Klee; Elai Davicioni; Robert B Jenkins
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-06-24       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  The genomic complexity of primary human prostate cancer.

Authors:  Michael F Berger; Michael S Lawrence; Francesca Demichelis; Yotam Drier; Kristian Cibulskis; Andrey Y Sivachenko; Andrea Sboner; Raquel Esgueva; Dorothee Pflueger; Carrie Sougnez; Robert Onofrio; Scott L Carter; Kyung Park; Lukas Habegger; Lauren Ambrogio; Timothy Fennell; Melissa Parkin; Gordon Saksena; Douglas Voet; Alex H Ramos; Trevor J Pugh; Jane Wilkinson; Sheila Fisher; Wendy Winckler; Scott Mahan; Kristin Ardlie; Jennifer Baldwin; Jonathan W Simons; Naoki Kitabayashi; Theresa Y MacDonald; Philip W Kantoff; Lynda Chin; Stacey B Gabriel; Mark B Gerstein; Todd R Golub; Matthew Meyerson; Ashutosh Tewari; Eric S Lander; Gad Getz; Mark A Rubin; Levi A Garraway
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2011-02-10       Impact factor: 49.962

View more
  17 in total

1.  SENP1-modulated sumoylation regulates retinoblastoma protein (RB) and Lamin A/C interaction and stabilization.

Authors:  P Sharma; M R Kuehn
Journal:  Oncogene       Date:  2016-06-06       Impact factor: 9.867

2.  A cellular and bioinformatics analysis of the SENP1 SUMO isopeptidase in pancreatic cancer.

Authors:  Danielle M Bouchard; Michael J Matunis
Journal:  J Gastrointest Oncol       Date:  2019-10

Review 3.  High altitude exposure affects male reproductive parameters: could it also affect the prostate?†.

Authors:  Diana Elizabeth Alcantara-Zapata; Aníbal J Llanos; Carolina Nazzal
Journal:  Biol Reprod       Date:  2022-03-19       Impact factor: 4.285

4.  Association of PTEN expression with biochemical recurrence in prostate cancer: results based on previous reports.

Authors:  Haijie Xie; Bin Xie; Chunyu Liu; Jun Wang; Yong Xu
Journal:  Onco Targets Ther       Date:  2017-10-24       Impact factor: 4.147

5.  Increased ERCC1 expression is linked to chromosomal aberrations and adverse tumor biology in prostate cancer.

Authors:  Frank Jacobsen; Billurvan Taskin; Nathaniel Melling; Charlotte Sauer; Corinna Wittmer; Claudia Hube-Magg; Martina Kluth; Ronald Simon; Dirk Pehrke; Burkhard Beyer; Thomas Steuber; Imke Thederan; Guido Sauter; Thorsten Schlomm; Waldemar Wilczak; Katharina Möller; Sören A Weidemann; Susanne Burdak-Rothkamm
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2017-07-26       Impact factor: 4.430

6.  SUMO-Specific Cysteine Protease 1 Promotes Epithelial Mesenchymal Transition of Prostate Cancer Cells via Regulating SMAD4 deSUMOylation.

Authors:  Xiaoyan Zhang; Hao Wang; Hua Wang; Fengjun Xiao; Prem Seth; Weidong Xu; Qinghua Jia; Chutse Wu; Yuefeng Yang; Lisheng Wang
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2017-04-12       Impact factor: 5.923

7.  Progression inference for somatic mutations in cancer.

Authors:  Leif E Peterson; Tatiana Kovyrshina
Journal:  Heliyon       Date:  2017-04-11

8.  High-Level γ-Glutamyl-Hydrolase (GGH) Expression is Linked to Poor Prognosis in ERG Negative Prostate Cancer.

Authors:  Nathaniel Melling; Masoud Rashed; Cornelia Schroeder; Claudia Hube-Magg; Martina Kluth; Dagmar Lang; Ronald Simon; Christina Möller-Koop; Stefan Steurer; Guido Sauter; Frank Jacobsen; Franziska Büscheck; Corinna Wittmer; Till Clauditz; Till Krech; Maria Christina Tsourlakis; Sarah Minner; Hartwig Huland; Markus Graefen; Lars Budäus; Imke Thederan; Georg Salomon; Thorsten Schlomm; Waldemar Wilczak
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2017-01-29       Impact factor: 5.923

9.  Upregulation of centromere protein F is linked to aggressive prostate cancers.

Authors:  Cosima Göbel; Cansu Özden; Cornelia Schroeder; Claudia Hube-Magg; Martina Kluth; Christina Möller-Koop; Emily Neubauer; Andrea Hinsch; Frank Jacobsen; Ronald Simon; Guido Sauter; Uwe Michl; Dirk Pehrke; Hartwig Huland; Markus Graefen; Thorsten Schlomm; Andreas M Luebke
Journal:  Cancer Manag Res       Date:  2018-11-09       Impact factor: 3.989

10.  Up regulation and nuclear translocation of Y-box binding protein 1 (YB-1) is linked to poor prognosis in ERG-negative prostate cancer.

Authors:  Asmus Heumann; Özge Kaya; Christoph Burdelski; Claudia Hube-Magg; Martina Kluth; Dagmar S Lang; Ronald Simon; Burkhard Beyer; Imke Thederan; Guido Sauter; Jakob R Izbicki; Andreas M Luebke; Andrea Hinsch; Frank Jacobsen; Corinna Wittmer; Franziska Büscheck; Doris Höflmayer; Sarah Minner; Maria Christina Tsourlakis; Thorsten Schlomm; Waldemar Wilczak
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-05-17       Impact factor: 4.379

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.