| Literature DB >> 27999209 |
Jeff Rector1, Sasha Kapil2, Kelly J Treude2, Phyllis Kumm1, Jason G Glanzer1, Brendan M Byrne1, Shengqin Liu1, Lynette M Smith3, Dominick J DiMaio4, Peter Giannini1, Russell B Smith2, Greg G Oakley1,5.
Abstract
Oral cancers are easily accessible compared to many other cancers. Nevertheless, oral cancer is often diagnosed late, resulting in a poor prognosis. Most oral cancers are squamous cell carcinomas that predominantly develop from cell hyperplasias and dysplasias. DNA damage is induced in these tissues directly or indirectly in response to oncogene-induced deregulation of cellular proliferation. Consequently, a DNA Damage response (DDR) and a cell cycle checkpoint is activated. As dysplasia transitions to cancer, proteins involved in DNA damage and checkpoint signaling are mutated or silenced decreasing cell death while increasing genomic instability and allowing continued tumor progression. Hyperphosphorylation of Replication Protein A (RPA), including phosphorylation of Ser4 and Ser8 of RPA2, is a well-known indicator of DNA damage and checkpoint activation. In this study, we utilize S4S8-RPA phosphorylation as a marker for cancer development and progression in oral squamous cell carcinomas (OSCC). S4S8-RPA phosphorylation was observed to be low in normal cells, high in dysplasias, moderate in early grade tumors, and low in late stage tumors, essentially supporting the model of the DDR as an early barrier to tumorigenesis in certain types of cancers. In contrast, overall RPA expression was not correlative to DDR activation or tumor progression. Utilizing S4S8-RPA phosphorylation to indicate competent DDR activation in the future may have clinical significance in OSCC treatment decisions, by predicting the susceptibility of cancer cells to first-line platinum-based therapies for locally advanced, metastatic and recurrent OSCC.Entities:
Keywords: immunohistochemistry; phosphorylation; replication protein A; squamous cell carcinoma; tumorigenicity
Mesh:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 27999209 PMCID: PMC5354728 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.14001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1(A) Proportional breakdown of S4S8-RPA phosphorylation groups (low, moderate and high phosphorylation) in cells from normal, dysplasia or OSCC tissues. (B) Proportional breakdown of overall RPA expression levels (low, moderate and high expression) in cells from normal, dysplasia or OSCC tissues.
Figure 2Kaplan-Meier survival plots displaying OSCC survival probability for the patients that were not treated with chemotherapy/radiation therapy
Survival probability is displayed in comparison to (A) S4S8-RPA phosphorylation levels and (B) overall RPA expression levels (low, moderate, high). Censored data is indicated by a tick mark.
Figure 3Kaplan-Meier survival plot examining OSCC survival probability in the subgroup of patients who were treated with chemotherapy/radiation therapy
Survival probability is displayed in comparison to (A) S4S8-RPA phosphorylation and (B) overall RPA expression levels (low, moderate, high). Censored data is indicated by a tick mark.
Figure 4Chart displaying the proportional breakdown of OSCC tumor grade classification (T1-T2, T3-T4) in comparison to relative low or high S4S8-RPA phosphorylation levels (All OSCC (n = 56); High RPA-P (n = 8); Low RPA-P (n = 30)