| Literature DB >> 29121666 |
Georg Richtig1, Ariane Aigelsreiter2, Daniela Schwarzenbacher3,4, Anna Lena Ress3,4, Jan Basri Adiprasito3,4, Verena Stiegelbauer3,4, Gerald Hoefler2, Silvia Schauer2, Tobias Kiesslich5,6, Peter Kornprat7, Thomas Winder8, Florian Eisner3, Armin Gerger3, Herbert Stoeger3, Rudolf Stauber9, Carolin Lackner2, Martin Pichler3,4,10.
Abstract
SOX9 has been previously shown to be involved in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and other types of cancer. However, prognostic studies so far involved rather small cohorts or lack external validation and experimental data. In this study, we firstly determined the histological expression pattern of SOX9 in human HCC by immunohistochemistry (n = 84) and evaluated its prognostic value. External cohorts of publicly available datasets were used to validate its prognostic relevance in HCC (n = 359) and other types of cancer including breast (n = 3951), ovarian (n = 1306), lung (n = 1926) and gastric cancer (n = 876). Functional SOX9 knock-down studies using siRNA and cancer stem cell models were generated in a panel of liver and breast cancer cell lines. High level of SOX9 was associated with poor survival even after adjustment for other prognostic factors in multivariate analysis (HR = 2.103, 95%CI = 1.064 to 4.156, p = 0.021). SOX9 prevailed a poor prognostic factor in all cancer validation cohorts (p<0.05). Reduced SOX9 expression by siRNA decreased the growth of liver cancer cells (p<0.05). SOX9 expression was associated with stem cell features in all tested cell lines (p<0.05). In conclusion, this study demonstrated in a large number of patients from multiple cohorts that high levels of SOX9 are a consistent negative prognostic factor.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29121666 PMCID: PMC5679634 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0187814
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Clinicopathological characteristics of HCC patients in this study.
| Clinicopathological parameter | No. of patients (n = 82)(%) |
|---|---|
| Male | 63/82 (76.8%) |
| Female | 19/82 (23.2%) |
| ≤65 | 41/82 (50.0%) |
| >65 | 41/82 (50.0%) |
| T1 | 13/82 (15.9%) |
| T2 | 24/82 (29.3%) |
| T3 | 33/82 (40.2%) |
| T4 | 8/82 (9.8%) |
| Missing | 4/82 (4.9%) |
| G1 | 22/82 (26.8%) |
| G2 | 49/82 (59.8%) |
| G3 | 10/82 (12.2%) |
| Missing | 1/82 (1.2%) |
| Trabecular | 37/82 (45.1%) |
| Trabecular-tubular | 24/82 (29.3%) |
| Trabecular-solide | 9/82 (11.0%) |
| Tubular | 2/82 (2.4%) |
| Fibro, trabecular-tubular-solide | 5/82 (6.1%) |
| Fibro-lamellar | 3/82 (3.7%) |
| Solide | 2/82 (2.4%) |
| Yes | 52/80 (63.4%) |
| No | 28/80 (34.1%) |
| Positive | 28/82 (34.1%) |
| Negative | 54/82 (65.9%) |
Fig 1Immunohistochemical expression of SOX9 in hepatocellular carcinomas.
A and B: Hepatocellular carcinoma mostly negative for SOX9 expression. SOX9 positivity only in single cells (A, overview, 4x magnification). Pronounced SOX9 expression at the invasion front oft the tumor (B, detail, 20x magnification). C and D: Hepatocellular carcinoma with SOX9 positivity in 10–20% of tumor cells (C, overview, 4x magnification). D: Detail of HCC with trabecular pattern, positivity more pronounced at the external tumor cell plates (detail of HCC, 20x magnification). E and F: Hepatocelluar carcinoma with SOX9 expression in 5% of tumor cells (E, overview, 4x magnification). Beside SOX9 positive nuclei some cells with mitotic figures are highlighted. F: Detail of HCC with few positive nuclei and one mitotic figure in the upper left corner of the picture (40x magnification).
Frequency of the clinic-pathological characteristics and expression of SOX9 in study cohort with HCC.
| Clinico-pathological parameters | SOX9 positive staining (%) | SOX9 negative staining (%) | P |
|---|---|---|---|
| Male | 26 (31.7%) | 37 (45.1%) | |
| Female | 2 (2.4%) | 17 (20.7%) | |
| .641 | |||
| ≤65 | 15 (18.3%) | 26 (31.7%) | |
| >65 | 13 (15.9%) | 28 (34.1%) | |
| .225 | |||
| Yes | 20 (25.0%) | 32 (40.0%) | |
| No | 7 (8.8%) | 21 (26.3%) | |
| .748 | |||
| Low tumour stage (T1+T2) | 13 (16.7%) | 24 (30.8%) | |
| High tumour stage (T3+T4) | 13 (16.7%) | 28 (35.9%) | |
| .075 | |||
| Low grade (Grade 1) | 11 (13.6%) | 11 (13.6%) | |
| High grade (Grade 2 & 3) | 17 (21.0%) | 42 (51.9%) | |
| .583 | |||
| No MDB | 15 (20.3%) | 23 (31.1%) | |
| MDB | 12 (16.2%) | 24 (32.4%) | |
| .078 | |||
| No IHB | 21 (28.4%) | 27 (36.5%) | |
| IHB | 6 (8.1%) | 20 (27.0%) | |
| .583 | |||
| No inclusion bodies | 15 (20.3%) | 23 (31.1%) | |
| One or both inclusion bodies | 12 (16.2%) | 24 (32.4%) | |
| .339 | |||
| No inclusion | 13 (17.6%) | 18 (24.3%) | |
| IHB | 2 (2.7%) | 5 (6.8%) | |
| MDB | 8 (10.8%) | 9 (12.2%) | |
| IHB and MDB | 4 (5.4%) | 15 (20.3%) | |
aχ2 test; MDB = Mallory-Denk body; IHB = intracellular hyaline bodies
Fig 2Kaplan-Maier plot for SOX9 expression in HCC.
A: Kaplan-Maier plot for 3-year survival in patients with HCC showing immunohistochemical positive SOX9 expression versus negative SOX9 expression (n = 84). B: Kaplan-Maier plots for 3-year survival calculated from a dataset derived from the Cancer Genome Atlas in patients with HCC showing high SOX9 expression versus low SOX9 expression.
Fig 3(A) SOX9 knock-down was assessed by expression analysis of mRNA by qRT-PCR after siRNA treatment against SOX9. The dark grey bar shows a significant decrease in SOX9 expression in HepG2 cells. (b) HepG2 cells show reduced cellular growth after SOX9 knock-down after 96 hours follow-up.
Fig 4Prognostic significance of SOX9 across several cancer types.
(A) 5-year relapse free survival rates in breast cancer patients. (B) 5-year progression free survival in ovarian cancer patients. 5-year survival rates in patients with (C) lung cancer and (D) gastric cancer.
Fig 5Representative examples of tumour spheres in hepatocellular carcinoma (HepG2)(D) and breast cancer (MCF7)(A) (D) cells. SOX9 expression has been assessed by qRT-PCR in two liver cancer cell lines (HepG2 (B) and Hep3B (C)) and in three breast cancer cell lines (MCF7 (E), BT474 (F) and SUM159 (G)) comparing parental adherent or tumour spheres. In all five tested cell lines, SOX9 was significantly higher expressed in tumour spheres (between 1.6-fold and 57-fold increased) than in parental adherent cells. Expression levels of two cancer stem cell marker (Nanog (H) and Oct4 (I)) have been determined all five cancer cell lines in adherent cells and tumour spheres. Nanog and Oct4 were significantly up-regulated in tumour spheres in comparison to normal adherent tumour cells.