| Literature DB >> 29930747 |
Yoshiyuki Suehara1, Keisuke Akaike1,2, Kenta Mukaihara1,2, Aiko Kurisaki-Arakawa2, Daisuke Kubota1, Taketo Okubo1,2, Hiroyuki Mitomi2, Keiko Mitani2, Michiko Takahashi2, Midori Toda-Ishii1,2, Youngji Kim2, Yu Tanabe1, Tatsuya Takagi1, Takuo Hayashi2, Kaoru Mogushi3, Kazuo Kaneko1, Takashi Yao2, Tsuyoshi Saito2.
Abstract
Our group has previously demonstrated that pfetin, encoded by the KCTD12 gene, is a strong prognostic biomarker for gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs). However, the underlying mechanisms that control pfetin expression remain unknown. To elucidate the regulatory mechanisms of KCTD12 in GIST, in addition to a possible association between KCTD12 alterations and protein expression, we examined 76 patients with GISTs for KCTD12 mutations by PCR-direct sequence, and compared these results with clinicopathologic data. The function of pfetin in GIST progression was also revealed using GIST T1 cells. In this series, pfetin expression was not observed in 15 cases, and loss of pfetin expression was associated with higher mitotic rate (>5/50HPFs: p = 0.029). There was also a trend between presence of necrosis and loss of pfetin expression but this was not statistically significant (p = 0.09). KCTD12 mutations were frequently observed in 22 out of 76 GISTs (28.9%); however, they did not affect protein expression and were not associated with patients' prognosis. KCTD12 in vitro knockdown resulted in the accelerated growth of GIST T1 cells, confirming that pfetin functions as a tumor suppressor. KIT knockdown significantly inhibited cellular growth and upregulated the expression of pfetin at both the mRNA and protein level. These findings suggest that GISTs with loss of pfetin expression has proliferative advantage and that higher pfetin expression in GISTs may be indicative of lower expression levels of KIT. This relationship confirms that pfetin is a useful prognostic marker in GISTs.Entities:
Keywords: KIT; gastrointestinal stromal tumor; mutation; pfetin; tumor suppressor
Year: 2018 PMID: 29930747 PMCID: PMC6007475 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.25469
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
KCTD12 mutations in GISTs
| Patient# | Pfetin IHC | |
|---|---|---|
| 6 | (+) | Codon134 (CAG to TAG) |
| 13 | (−) | Codon160 (GGC to AGC) |
| 17 | (+) | Codon136 (GGC to GAC) |
| Codon138 (GGG to GAG) | ||
| 25 | (−) | Codon136 (GGC to GAC) |
| 26 | (−) | Codon141 (CCC to CTC) |
| Codon140 (CCG to CTG) | ||
| 27 | (+) | Codon270 (TAT to TGT) |
| Codon139 (CCG to TCG) | ||
| 30 | (+) | Codon150 (GGC to GAC) |
| Codon245 (GCC to CCC) | ||
| 31 | (+) | Codon138 (GGG to GAG) |
| 32 | (+) | Codon132 (CCC to CTC) |
| Codon248 (GTG to ATG) | ||
| 33 | (+) | Codon124 (GAG to AAG) |
| Codon228 (GCC to ACC) | ||
| Codon272 (CTC to TTC) | ||
| 34 | (+) | Codon139 (CCG to CTG) |
| 35 | (+) | Codon131 (GCG to ACG) |
| Codon240 (GGA to GAA) | ||
| Codon28 (GAG to GGG) | ||
| 39 | (+) | Codon40 (GTG to ATG) |
| Codon134 (CAG to TAG) | ||
| Codon143 (CGG to TGG) | ||
| 45 | (+) | Codon138 (GGG to AGG) |
| Codon195 (CTC to TTC) | ||
| Codon206 (CGC to TGC) | ||
| 46 | (+) | Codon191 (GCG to GTG) |
| 54 | (+) | Codon185 (AGT to AAT) |
| 60 | (+) | Codon126 (GTG to ATG) |
| 63 | (+) | Codon132 (CCC to CTC) |
| 65 | (+) | Codon134 (CAG to CAT) |
| 73 | (+) | Codon14 (GGC to AGC) |
| 74 | (+) | Codon4 (GCG to GTG) |
| 77 | (+) | Codon123 (CGC to CTC) |
Figure 1KCTD12 mutations in GISTs
(A, B) A patient case of GIST (Case #75) that harbored a mutation at codon 4 of the KCTD12 gene (GCG (Ala) to GTG (Val)) (A: tumor-derived DNA, B: corresponding normal tissue-derived DNA). The tissue samples from this patient case showed immunohistochemically detected pfetin expression (not shown). (C, D) A patient case of GIST (Case #32) that harbored a mutation at codon 138 of the KCTD12 gene (GGG (Gly) to GAG (Glu)) (C: tumor-derived DNA, D: corresponding normal tissue-derived DNA). The tissue samples from this patient case showed immunohistochemically detected pfetin expression (not shown).
Figure 2Effects of KCTD12 and KIT knockdown in GIST T1 cells
Knockdown of KCTD12 in the GIST T1 cell line resulted in significantly increased cell proliferation rates at 24–96 h after transfection. Furthermore, KIT knockdown was also performed in T1 cells. As expected, the knockdown of KIT drastically decreased T1 cell proliferation at 24–96 h after transfection.
Figure 3The relationship between the KIT and KCTD12 protein expression levels in GIST T1 cells
(A) Western blotting was performed at 24–96 h after transfection with corresponding siRNAs. Protein expression levels of KCTD12 increased at 24–96 h after KIT knockdown. In contrast, the knockdown of KCTD12 reduced KIT protein expression in the same period. (B) Expression levels of KCTD12 mRNA increased approximately 1.5–2-fold at 72–96 h after the transfection with KIT siRNA. (C) Expression levels of KIT mRNA showed slight but gradual reduction after the transfection with KCTD12 siRNA.