| Literature DB >> 28367434 |
Niklas Klümper1, Isabella Syring2, Wenzel Vogel1, Doris Schmidt2, Stefan C Müller2, Jörg Ellinger2, David Adler1, Johannes Brägelmann1,3, Sven Perner1.
Abstract
Introduction: Bladder cancer (BCa) is among the most frequent cancer entities and relevantly contributes to cancer-associated deaths worldwide. The multi-protein Mediator complex is a central regulator of the transcriptional machinery of protein-coding genes and has been described to be altered in several malignancies. MED1, a subunit of the tail module, was described to negatively modulate expression of metastasis-related genes and to be downregulated in melanoma and lung cancer. In contrast, MED1 hyperactivity was described in breast and prostate cancer, likely due its function as a hub for nuclear hormone receptors. So far, only little is known about the function of the Mediator complex in BCa. The aim of this study was therefore to investigate the role of MED1 in BCa as a prognostic biomarker and a biomarker of disease progression.Entities:
Keywords: MED1; bladder cancer; immunohistochemistry; mediator; mediator complex
Year: 2017 PMID: 28367434 PMCID: PMC5355444 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2017.00030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Sample size (frequency) and clinicopathological data of the bladder cancer (BCa) cohort.
| BCa Σ = 193 | Benign Σ = 31 | |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Female | 43 (22.3) | 11 (35.5) |
| Male | 150 (77.7) | 20 (64.5) |
|
| ||
| Mean | 67 | 65.6 |
| Median | 69 | 65 |
| Range | 36–94 | 43–81 |
|
| ||
| Tis | 30 (15.4) | / |
| T1 | 42 (21.8) | / |
| T2 | 42 (21.8) | / |
| T3 | 42 (21.8) | / |
| T4 | 37 (19.2) | / |
| N1 | 22 (11.4) | / |
| M1 | 4 (2.1) | / |
| Muscle invasion | 121 (62.7) | / |
| Cancer-associated death | 46 (23.8) | / |
| Relapse | 34 (19.7) | / |
Figure 1Representative images of the MED1 immunohistochemical staining of benign urothelium (A), non-muscle invasive bladder cancer (BCa) [(B), pT1], and muscle-invasive BCa [(C), pT3], 5× and 40× objective magnification. (D) Average MED1 staining intensity (mean brown chromogen intensity) of the BCa cohort across increasing tumor stages.
Figure 2(A) MED1 expression is significantly lower in muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC) compared to non-invasive pTis and T1 [non-muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC)]. (B,C) Decreased MED1 expression is associated with positive lymphonodal status and distant metastases. N0/M0 = no lymphonodal or distant metastases, N1/M1 = positive lymphonodal status or distant metastases (D) The overall survival of BCa patients with low MED1 protein expression is worse compared to patients with high MED1 protein expression (low =