| Literature DB >> 27459504 |
Mitsuro Kanda1, Chie Tanaka2, Daisuke Kobayashi2, Haruyoshi Tanaka2, Dai Shimizu2, Masahiro Shibata2, Hideki Takami2, Masamichi Hayashi2, Naoki Iwata2, Yukiko Niwa2, Suguru Yamada2, Tsutomu Fujii2, Goro Nakayama2, Michitaka Fujiwara2, Yasuhiro Kodera2.
Abstract
Prediction of tumor recurrence after curative resection is critical for determining the prognosis of patients with gastric cancer (GC). The initiation and progression of GC are associated with inappropriate immune responses caused by chronic inflammation of the gastric mucosa. To identify immunoregulatory molecules involved in GC progression, GC cell lines and 200 pairs of tumor and normal tissues from patients with GC were analyzed for gene expression, amplification and methylation as well as function of a differentially expressed gene. The transcriptome analysis revealed that marginal zone B and B1 cell specific protein (MZB1) was expressed at significantly decreased levels in primary GC tissues when compared with the corresponding normal gastric mucosa. PCR array analysis exploring genes expressed cooperatively with MZB1 revealed that differential expression of MZB1 mRNA in GC cell lines correlated positively with the levels of the mRNAs encoding estrogen receptor 1 and desumoylating isopeptidase 1. Hypermethylation of the MZB1 promoter was frequent in cell lines with decreased levels of MZB1 mRNA. siRNA-mediated knockdown of MZB1 significantly increased proliferation, invasion and migration of GC cell lines. Low MZB1 expression was an independent prognostic factor for recurrence after curative gastrectomy and was associated significantly with increased hematogenous recurrence. MZB1 acts as a suppressor of GC. Low MZB1 expression in the primary GC tissue is predictive of recurrence after curative resection.Entities:
Keywords: biomarker; gastric cancer; marginal zone B and B1 cell specific protein; methylation; recurrence
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27459504 DOI: 10.1002/ijc.30286
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cancer ISSN: 0020-7136 Impact factor: 7.396