Literature DB >> 30519097

Upregulation of centromere protein F is linked to aggressive prostate cancers.

Cosima Göbel1, Cansu Özden1, Cornelia Schroeder2, Claudia Hube-Magg1, Martina Kluth1, Christina Möller-Koop1, Emily Neubauer1, Andrea Hinsch1, Frank Jacobsen1, Ronald Simon1, Guido Sauter1, Uwe Michl3, Dirk Pehrke3,4, Hartwig Huland3, Markus Graefen3, Thorsten Schlomm3,4, Andreas M Luebke1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Centromere protein F (CENPF) is a key component of the kinetochore complex and plays a crucial role in chromosome segregation and cell cycle progression. Recent work suggests that CENPF upregulation is linked to aggressive tumor features in a variety of malignancies including prostate cancer.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Using a highly annotated tissue microarray, we analyzed CENPF protein expression from a cohort of 8,298 prostatectomized patients by immunohistochemistry to study its effect on prostate-specific antigen recurrence-free survival.
RESULTS: CENPF overexpression was found in 53% of cancers, and was linked to higher Gleason grade, advanced pathological tumor stage, accelerated cell proliferation, and lymph node metastasis (p<0.0001, each). A comparison with other key molecular features accessible through the microarray revealed strong associations between CENPF overexpression and presence of erythroblast transformation-specific (ETS)-related gene (ERG) fusion as well as phosphatase and tensin homolog deletion (p<0.0001, each). CENPF overexpression was linked to early biochemical recurrence. A subset analysis revealed that this was driven by the ERG-negative subset (p<0.0001). This was independent of established preoperative and postoperative prognostic parameters in multivariate analyses.
CONCLUSION: The results of our study identify CENPF overexpression as an important mechanism and a potential biomarker for prostate cancer aggressiveness.

Entities:  

Keywords:  CENPF; ERG; deletion; prognosis; prostate cancer; tissue microarray

Year:  2018        PMID: 30519097      PMCID: PMC6234994          DOI: 10.2147/CMAR.S165630

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer Manag Res        ISSN: 1179-1322            Impact factor:   3.989


Introduction

In Western societies, the most prevalent cancer in men is prostate cancer.1 The majority of prostate cancers are indolent. Only a small subset is highly aggressive and requires treatment.2,3 Gleason grade and tumor extent on biopsies, prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels, and clinical stage are established preoperative prognostic parameters. These parameters are statistically powerful in retrospective analysis but insufficient for optimal individual treatment decisions. The hope is that a further understanding of disease biology will identify additional clinically applicable molecular markers for more reliable predictions of prostate cancer aggressiveness. Centromere protein F (CENPF, also known as mitosin) is a microtubule-associated protein involved in mitosis and cell differentiation.4 CENPF becomes upregulated during the G2/M phase and accumulates to the kinetochore complex, facilitating microtubule attachment and chromosome segregation.5,6 In addition, CENPF is essential – and probably rate limiting – for cell proliferation as it interacts with key cell cycle checkpoint proteins, such as the retinoblastoma protein4 and the Bub1 kinase,7 or late telophase proteins including syntaxin 48 and SNAP25.9 CENPF upregulation has been observed in breast cancer,11 nasopharyngeal cancer,12 hepatocellular carcinoma,13 esophageal squamous cell carcinoma,14 gastrointestinal stromal tumors,15 and non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma,16 and in some cases it is associated with aggressive tumor phenotype and poor survival.11,12,14 Aytes et al showed that in prostate cancer cosilencing of the fork head box protein M1 (FOXM1) and CENPF abrogates tumor cell growth.10 Zhuo et al described higher CENPF expression in 99 cancer samples compared with normal tissue and suggested an association with unfavorable tumor phenotype and poor prognosis.17 Similar results were mentioned for the outcome of 821 patients with prostate cancers.10 These promising data encouraged us to interrogate the prognostic impact of CENPF protein expression in a large set of prostate cancers. Therefore, we performed immunohistochemical analysis of CENPF protein expression on a panel of >11,000 prostate cancer specimens associated with follow-up information and an attached molecular database.

Materials and methods

Patients

The 12,427 radical prostatectomy specimens were from patients who had surgery between 1992 and 2014 at the Department of Urology and the Martini Clinic at the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf. The specimens were analyzed according to a standard procedure.18 Tumor stage, Gleason grade, nodal status, and status of the resection margin were retrieved from the patients’ records. Quantitative Gleason grading was performed using the percentage of Gleason 4 patterns.19 Follow-up data were available for 11,665 patients with a median follow-up of 50 months (range: 1–264 months; Table 1). PSA values were measured following surgery, and PSA recurrence was defined as a postoperative PSA of 0.2 ng/mL and increasing in subsequent measurements. The tissue microarray manufacturing process was described in detail earlier.20 In short, a single 0.6 mm core was taken from a representative tissue block. For internal control, various control tissues and normal prostate tissue were included. The molecular database attached to this tissue microarray contains results on erythroblast transformation-specific (ETS)-related gene (ERG) protein expression,21 ERG rearrangement analysis by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH)22 and deletion status of 5q21 (chromodomain-helicase-DNA-binding protein 1 [CHD1]),23 6q15 (mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase 7 [MAP3K7]),24 10q23 (phosphatase and tensin homolog [PTEN]),25 and 3p13 (fork head box protein P1 [FOXP1])26 cancers. The use of leftover archived diagnostic tissues for the manufacturing of tissue microarrays and their analysis in conjunction with anonymized patient data for research purposes was approved by local laws (HmbKHG, §12,1) and by the local ethics committee (Ethics commission Hamburg, WF-049/09 and PV3652). All work was carried out in compliance with the Helsinki Declaration.
Table 1

Pathological and clinical data of the arrayed prostate cancers

No. of patients
Study cohort on TMA (n=12,427)Biochemical relapse among categories
Follow-up (month)
n11,6652,769 (23.7%)
Mean (median)62.9 (50.0)
Age (years)
≤5033481 (24.3%)
51–593,061705 (23%)
60–697,1881,610 (22.4%)
≥701,761370 (21.0%)
Pretreatment PSA (ng/mL)
<41,585242 (15.3%)
4–107,4801,355 (18.1%)
10–202,412737 (30.6%)
>20812397 (48.9%)
pT stage (AJCC 2002)
pT28,1871,095 (13.4%)
pT3a2,660817 (30.7%)
pT3b1,465796 (54.3%)
pT46351 (81.0%)
Gleason grade
≤3+32,848234 (8.2%)
3+46,6791,240 (18.6%)
3+4 Tert.5433115 (26.6%)
4+31,210576 (47.6%)
4+3 Tert.5646317 (49.1%)
≥4+4596348 (58.4%)
Lymph node stage
pN06,9701,636 (23.5%)
pN+693393 (56.7%)
Surgical margin
Negative9,9901,848 (18.5%)
Positive2,211853 (38.6%)

Notes: In the column “Study cohort on TMA”, numbers do not always add up to 12,427 in different categories because of cases with missing data. Percent in column “Biochemical relapse among categories” refers to the fraction of samples with biochemical relapse within each parameter in the different categories.

Abbreviations: PSA, prostate-specific antigen; AJCC, American Joint Committee on Cancer; TMA, tissue microarray.

Immunohistochemistry (IHC)

Freshly cut tissue microarray sections were stained the same day and in a single run. Slides were deparaffinized and exposed to heat-induced antigen retrieval for 5 minutes at 121°C in pH 9.0 antigen retrieval buffer. Primary antibody specific for CENPF (mouse monoclonal antibody ab90, dilution 1:1350; Abcam, Cambridge, UK) was applied at 37°C for 60 minutes. Bound antibody was visualized with the EnVision Kit (Dako, Glostrup, Denmark). Since CENPF typically shows nuclear and cytoplasmic staining in 100% of the tumor cells of a tissue spot, we recorded only the staining intensity as negative, weak, moderate, and strong staining.

Statistics

JMP 12.0 software (SAS Institute Inc., NC, USA) was used. Contingency tables were calculated to study the association between CENPF expression and other clinicopathological variables, and the likelihood test was used to find significant relationships. Analysis of variance and F test were applied to find associations between CENPF expression and tumor cell proliferation as measured by the Ki67-labeling index. Kaplan–Meier curves were generated using biochemical (PSA) recurrence as the clinical endpoint. The log-rank test was applied to test the significance of differences between stratified survival functions.

Results

A total of 9,055 (73%) of the 12,427 arrayed tumor samples displayed interpretable CENPF staining. Noninformative cases (27%) either had no tissue or an absence of unequivocal cancer tissue in the microarray spot. Normal prostatic glands showed negative to weak cytoplasmic CENPF staining in luminal and basal cells. Comparable staining was also found in stromal cells. In cancer cells, CENPF-positive staining was seen in 8,066 of our 9,055 (89%) interpretable prostate cancers and was considered weak in 36.6%, moderate in 34.9%, and strong in 17.6% of cancers. Representative images of CENPF staining in normal and cancerous prostate samples are given in Figure 1.
Figure 1

Representative pictures of CENPF staining in (A) normal prostate glands (negative/weak) and in prostate cancer with (B) negative/weak, (C) moderate, and (D) strong staining intensity. Spot size 600 µm, 100× magnification.

Abbreviation: CENPF, centromere protein F.

Association with TMPRSS2:ERG fusion status and ERG protein expression

To evaluate whether CENPF expression is associated with ERG status in prostate cancers, we used data from previous studies.21,22. Data on transmembrane protease, serine 2 (TMPRSS2):ERG fusion status obtained by FISH were available from 5,365 tumors and by IHC from 8,073 tumors with evaluable CENPF staining. Data on both ERG-FISH and IHC were available from 5,198 cancers, and an identical result (ERG-IHC positive and break by FISH or ERG-IHC negative and no break by FISH) was found in 4,975 of 5,198 (95.7%) cancers. Increased (ie, moderate to strong) CENPF staining was more frequent in TMPRSS2:ERG rearranged (72.05%) and ERG-positive prostate cancers (73.46%) than in ERG-negative tumors by FISH (39.11%) or IHC (38.3%, p<0.0001 each, Figure 2). It is of note that ERG expression was not associated with the prognosis as indicated by identical Kaplan–Meier curves for PSA recurrence-free survival in the ERG-negative and ERG-positive subset (Figure S1).
Figure 2

Association between CENPF staining level and clinical tumor phenotype.

Abbreviations: CENPF, centromere protein F; FISH, fluorescence in situ hybridization; IHC, immunohistochemistry.

Association with tumor phenotype

Increasing CENPF staining was linked to advanced pathological tumor stage, higher Gleason grade, and lymph node positivity (p<0.0001 each, Figure 3). Subset analysis of ERG-negative and ERG-positive cancers revealed that these associations were driven by the subset of ERG-negative cancers and much less by ERG-positive cancers (Tables S1 and S2).
Figure 3

Association between CENPF staining and ERG expression by immunohistochemistry or TMPRSS2:ERG fusion by FISH.

Abbreviations: CENPF, centromere protein F; ERG, erythroblast transformation-specific (ETS)-related gene; TMPRSS2, transmembrane protease, serine 2; FISH, fluorescence in situ hybridization.

Association with other key genomic deletions

Earlier studies have provided evidence for distinct molecular subgroups of prostate cancers defined by TMPRSS2:ERG fusion and several genomic deletions. This includes a strong association of PTEN and 3p13 deletions with ERG positivity and of 5q21 and 6q15 deletions with ERG negativity.23–26 To study whether CENPF expression might be particularly associated with one of these genomic deletions, CENPF data were compared with preexisting findings on 10q23 (PTEN), 3p13 (FOXP1), 6q15 (MAP3K7), and 5q21 (CHD1) deletions. For tumors that were jointly analyzed, there were positive associations between CENPF overexpression and deletions of PTEN or 3p13 (p<0.0001 each), as well as negative associations between CENPF overexpression and deletions of 5q or 6q (p=0.027 and p<0.0001, respectively, Figure 4A). These associations make intuitive sense due to the known link between these deletions and a positive ERG status (PTEN, 3p) or a negative ERG status (5q, 6q). However, subset analysis of ERG-negative and ERG-positive cancers demonstrated that CENPF overexpression was linked to PTEN deletions independent of the ERG status (p<0.0001 each, Figure 4B and C).
Figure 4

Association between CENPF staining intensity and 10q23 (PTEN), 5q21 (CHD1), 6q15 (MAP3K7), and 3p13 (FOXP1) deletions in (A) all cancers, (B) the ERG-negative subset, and (C) the ERG-positive subset.

Abbreviations: CENPF, centromere protein F; PTEN, phosphatase and tensin homolog; CHD1, chromodomain-helicase-DNA-binding protein 1; MAP3K7, mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase 7; FOXP1, fork head box protein P1.

Association with tumor cell proliferation

High-level CENPF staining was linked to accelerated cell proliferation as measured by the Ki67-labeling index (Ki67LI) obtained from an earlier study.27 The average Ki67LI increased from 1.41 in cancers lacking CENPF expression to 3.35 in cancers with strong CENPF levels (p<0.0001, Figure 5). This association was also found both in ERG-negative (p<0.0001) and ERG-positive cancers (p=0.0061; data not shown). It was independent from the Gleason score as it held true in all tumor subsets with identical Gleason score (Figure 5).
Figure 5

Ki67 labeling index is independently associated with the CENPF expression level and the Gleason grade.

Abbreviation: CENPF, centromere protein F.

Association with PSA recurrence

Follow-up data were available for 8,298 patients with interpretable CENPF staining on the tissue microarray. A highly significant association between strong CENPF expression and early PSA recurrence was seen in all tumors (p<0.0001, Figure 6A) and in the subset of ERG fusion-negative cancers (p<0.0001, Figure 6B). The prognostic impact of CENPF was less significant in ERG fusion-positive cancers (p=0.0188, Figures 6C). To better rate the prognostic power of CENPF, we performed further subset analyses in cancers with identical classical and quantitative Gleason scores. Here, CENPF staining did not provide clear-cut prognostic information beyond the Gleason score, neither in any subsets defined by the classical Gleason score (Figure S2A) nor in any subsets defined by the quantitative Gleason score (Figure S2B–H).
Figure 6

Association between CENPF expression and PSA recurrence after prostatectomy in (A) all cancers, (B) the ERG-negative subset, and (C) the ERG-positive subset. Abbreviations: CENPF, centromere protein F; PSA, prostate-specific antigen; ERG, erythroblast transformation-specific (ETS)-related gene.

Multivariate analyses

To evaluate whether CENPF expression can serve as a prognostic biomarker independent of the established prognostic factors (Gleason grade at biopsy, clinical stage, preoperative PSA level, Gleason grade at radical prostatectomy, pathological stage, surgical margin status, and nodal status), multivariate analyses of PSA recurrence-free survival were performed in 3 different scenarios (Table 2). CENPF proved to be a significant independent prognostic parameter in all 3 scenarios. The HR for PSA recurrence after prostatectomy peaked at 1.23 in the preoperative scenario 1. This held true for the ERG-negative subset with the exception of scenario 3 and the ERG-positive subset with the exception of scenario 2.
Table 2

HR for PSA recurrence-free survival after prostatectomy of established prognostic parameter and CENPF expression

Tumor subsetScenario 1
Scenario 2
Scenario 3
TotalERG negativeERG positiveTotalERG negativeERG positiveTotalERG negativeERG positive
Analyzable (N)8,0324,0343,1258,1674,0943,1845,2192,6672,075
Gleason grade biopsy
3+4 vs. ≤3+31.87 (1.67–2.09)***1.67***2.02***
4+3 vs. 3+41.74 (1.53–1.97)***1.65***1.75***
≥4+4 vs. 4+31.29 (1.13–1.48)**1.26*1.51**
cT stage
T2a vs. T1c1.31 (1.16–1.47)***1.30*1.35**1.28 (1.14–1.43)***1.28*1.33*
T2b vs. T2a1.44 (1.23–1.68)***1.63***1.241.33 (1.14–1.55)**1.57**1.08
T2c vs. T2b1.20 (0.94–1.51)1.171.141.19 (0.94–1.51)1.061.21
T3a vs. T2c0.68 (0.48–0.94)*0.52*0.890.79 (0.57–1.10)0.671.02
Preoperative PSA level
4–10 vs. <41.33 (1.13–1.58)**1.141.45*1.32 (1.12–1.57)**1.121.46*1.10 (0.91–1.34)1.001.18
10–20 vs. 4–101.54 (1.39–1.71)***1.62***1.45***1.41 (1.27–1.57)***1.49***1.28*1.20 (1.06–1.34)*1.23*1.11
>20 vs. 10–201.66 (1.44–1.90)***1.48***1.75***1.49 (1.29–1.71)***1.28*1.75***1.27 (1.09–1.46)*1.181.30*
CENPF expression
Weak vs. negative1.12 (0.95–1.33)1.111.201.03 (0.87–1.21)1.011.151.12 (0.93–1.37)1.091.16
Moderate vs. weak1.14 (1.03–1.27)*1.23*1.041.17 (1.06–1.30)*1.21*1.051.06 (0.94–1.19)1.250.94
Strong vs. moderate1.23 (1.09–1.39)**1.191.29*1.17 (1.04–1.32)*1.231.171.18 (1.03–1.34)*1.181.20*
Gleason-grade RPE
3+4 vs. ≤3+32.70 (2.31–3.17)***2.78***2.98***2.09 (1.67–2.65)***1.69**2.69***
4+3 vs. 3+42.84 (2.56–3.14)***2.33***3.37***2.02 (1.80–2.27)***1.90***2.03***
≥4+4 vs. 4+31.73 (1.49–2.01)***1.71***2.09***1.15 (0.98–1.35)1.141.41*
pT stage
T3a vs. T22.00 (1.76–2.28)***1.89***2.23***
T3b-4 vs. T3a1.57 (1.38–177)***1.53***1.67***
R status
R1 vs. R01.25 (1.12–1.40)***1.151.36**
N stage
N+ vs. N01.45 (1.26–1.67)***1.43***1.33*

Notes: Scenario 1 combines preoperatively available parameter (preoperative Gleason grade obtained on the original biopsy, cT stage, and preoperative PSA) with the postoperative CENPF expression. In scenario 2, the biopsy Gleason is replaced by the Gleason grade obtained on RPE. Scenario 3 includes all relevant parameters after RPE (pT stage, surgical margin [R] status, and lymph node [pN] stage are added). ERG positive/negative denotes the expression of the ETS-related gene. 95% CI in brackets. Asterisk indicate significance level:

p≤0.05,

p≤0.001,

p≤0.0001.

Abbreviations: PSA, prostate-specific antigen; CENPF, centromere protein F; ERG, erythroblast transformation-specific (ETS)-related gene; cT, clinical tumor; RPE, radical prostatectomy; pT, pathological tumor.

Discussion

The results of our study identify CENPF as a strong and independent predictor of patient prognosis. Successful analysis of >9,000 prostate cancers by IHC revealed detectable CENPF staining in 90% of prostate cancers, including almost 40% of tumors with no more than weak staining. The fact that such low-level staining was also found in normal prostate glands as well as in stromal cells suggests that our IHC protocol was sufficiently sensitive to detect physiological expression of CENPF. However, increased CENPF expression in 50% of cancers indicates that CENPF becomes upregulated during malignant transformation in a high fraction of prostate cancers. Only one published study has previously evaluated CENPF protein expression by IHC in prostate cancer. In line with our findings, Zhuo et al reported significantly higher CENPF levels in 99 tumor samples compared with benign tissues.17 Tumor-associated upregulation of CENPF was also found in other tumor types including esophageal cancer, hepatocellular carcinoma, non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, nasopharyngeal cancer, and breast cancer.11–17 CENPF overexpression was linked to features of aggressive and prognostically unfavorable cancers in our study, including advanced tumor stage, higher Gleason grade, presence of lymph node metastasis, accelerated cell proliferation, and early biochemical recurrence (p<0.0001 each). Our results are in line with earlier reports demonstrating an important role of CENPF for tumor cell proliferation in general and prostate cancer biology. For example, Laoukili et al identified CENPF as a direct target gene of the master cell cycle regulator FOXM1, which controls expression of many G2-specific genes and the activity of PI3K/AKT and MAPK signaling pathways.28 More recently, cross-species regulatory network analysis described a synergistic interaction between FOXM1 and CENPF in driving prostate cancer malignancy and suggested that patients with overexpression of CENPF and FOXM1 had a particularly poor outcome.10 High CENPF expression has also been linked to increased tumor aggressiveness and poor survival in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma as well as nasopharyngeal and breast cancer.11,12,14 The molecular database attached to our tissue microarray allowed us to further study the impact of CENPF upregulation in molecularly defined subgroups of prostate cancers. About 50% of all prostate cancers carry a gene fusion linking the androgen-regulated serine protease TMPRSS2 with the ETS-transcription factor ERG resulting in an androgen-related overexpression of ERG.21,29,30 We found a massive upregulation of CENPF in a particularly high fraction of ERG-positive cancers. The reasons underlying this effect are not known. The CENPF promoter does not carry an ERG binding site according to the eukaryotic promoter database,31 but it cannot be excluded that CENPF is an indirect transcriptional target of ERG. For example, global expression analyses indicate upregulation of other members of the CENP family, including CENPO, CENPL, and CENPV in ERG-positive as compared to ERG-negative prostate cancers.32 Further evidence comes from recent work identifying a regulatory network comprising miR-101, CoupTFII, FOXM1, and CENPF,33 which has been suggested to interfere with ERG-dependent transcription.34 Irrespective of the reasons leading to CENPF upregulation in ERG-positive cancers, our data demonstrate that the prognostic value of CENPF was reduced in ERG-positive cancers. In previous studies, using the same tissue microarray, we identified various proteins with higher expression levels in ERG-positive than in ERG-negative prostate cancers. With several of these, the prognostic impact was substantially stronger in ERG-negative than in ERG-positive cancers.35–37 The present study demonstrates that CENPF belongs to this type of protein. Other biomarkers were only prognostic in ERG-positive cancers.38–40 Overall, these data suggest that tumor-relevant functions of CENPF and other proteins can become modified in an ERG-positive molecular environment. This is conceivable as ERG activation leads to substantial changes of the intracellular environment, affecting the expression of >1,600 genes.21,29,30 Next to TMPRSS2:ERG fusions, chromosomal deletions represent the second most frequent type of genomic aberration in prostate cancers, occurring at frequencies of up to 40%.32,41 In particular, deletions of PTEN (20%), 6q (20%), 5q (10%), and 3p (10%) belong to the most prevalent genomic alterations in this disease. These are linked to either positive (PTEN, 3p) or negative ERG status (6q, 5q) and are associated with poor patient prognosis.23–26 CENPF overexpression was unequivocally linked to deletions of PTEN only, suggesting a functional relationship between these two genes. PTEN deletion is the main cause for hyperactive PI3K/AKT signaling in prostate cancer and is associated with tumor growth, progression, and poor clinical outcome.42 In fact, a relevant functional interaction between CENPF and PI3K/AKT signaling is supported by recent functional data demonstrating that PI3K/AKT signaling was completely abrogated when CENPF was silenced, together with FOXM1, in DU145 prostate cancer cells.10 The results of our study identify CENPF as a promising candidate for a molecular test of prostate cancer aggressiveness. Our multivariate modeling suggests that a potential clinical application could be suitable to gain prognostic information not only at pretherapeutic stages, when only needle biopsies can be assessed, but also after radical prostatectomy when more comprehensive pathological data are available. It is of note that the Gleason grade is the strongest (and least expensive) prognostic feature in prostate cancer. In a recent analysis, we demonstrated that by using the percentage of unfavorable Gleason patterns, the Gleason grading could be transformed from a categorical into a continuous variable with an even finer discrimination of prognostic subgroups.19,43 The prognostic impact of CENPF expression largely disappeared in groups defined by Gleason grade categories or by comparable percentages of Gleason 4 patterns, demonstrating the power of morphological assessment of malignancy. These findings show that the threshold for a molecular test to significantly augment morphology in prognostication is rather high. Limitations of the present study are that it was a retrospective study and that CENPF testing was done on prostatectomy specimens. To cope with the heterogeneity of prostate cancer, Kaplan–Meier analysis was done on 8,032 patients, which should guarantee a reliable result for the cohort. For individual decision-making, a prospective study is needed with at least 10 replicates of biopsy specimens for each proband. Due to its critical role in cell proliferation and its frequent expression in cancer cells, CENPF gained interest as a potential molecular target for novel anticancer therapies. To date, no clinically applicable anti-CENPF drugs are available, but initial in vitro experiments are encouraging for the development of strategies for pharmacological inhibition. For example, zoledronic acid, a nitrogen-containing bisphosphonate usually applied in bone disease, is found to cause loss of CENPF from the kinetochore complex in breast cancer cell lines by inhibition of CENPF farnesylation/activation, subsequently leading to delayed cell cycle progression and inhibition of cell proliferation.44 Moreover, due to the putative effect of CENPF on growth pathways, including PI3K/AKT and MAPK signaling,10 CENPF inhibitors may provide an attractive means for inactivation of these signaling pathways.

Conclusion

In summary, our study shows the prognostic value of CENPF. The strong association between CENPF upregulation and PTEN deletion supports the concept of a regulatory function of CENPF for major growth pathways, which makes it an attractive candidate for novel therapeutic approaches. Prognostic impact of ERG expression on biochemical relapse. Abbreviation: ERG, erythroblast transformation-specific (ETS)-related gene. Prognostic impact of CENPF expression in subsets of cancers defined by the Gleason score. Notes: (A) Impact of negative and positive CENPF expression compared with the classical Gleason score categories. (B–H) Impact of negative and positive CENPF expression compared with the quantitative Gleason score categories defined by subsets of cancers with (B) ≤5% Gleason 4 patterns, (C) 6%–10% Gleason 4 patterns, (D) 11%–20% Gleason 4 patterns, (E) 21%–30% Gleason 4 patterns, (F) 31%–49% Gleason 4 patterns, (G) 50%–60% Gleason 4 patterns, (H) 61%–100% Gleason 4 patterns. Abbreviation: CENPF, centromere protein F. Association between CENPF staining results and prostate cancer phenotype in ERG-negative tumors Abbreviations: CENPF, centromere protein F; ERG, erythroblast transformation-specific (ETS)-related gene; PSA, PSA, prostate-specific antigen. Association between CENPF staining results and prostate cancer phenotype in ERG-positive tumors Abbreviations: CENPF, centromere protein F; ERG, erythroblast transformation-specific (ETS)-related gene; PSA, prostate-specific antigen.
Table S1

Association between CENPF staining results and prostate cancer phenotype in ERG-negative tumors

ParameterCENPF
p-value
n evaluableNegative (%)Weak (%)Moderate (%)Strong (%)
All cancers4,512 17.843.9 28.59.8
Tumor stage
pT23,004 19.344.5 27.98.4<0.0001
pT3a936 17.042.1 29.711.2
pT3b-pT4559 10.644.4 29.915.2
Gleason grade
≤3+3886 27.447.9 20.54.2<0.0001
3+42,419 17.643.2 29.49.7
3+4 Tert.5210 11.442.9 29.016.7
4+3498 12.941.8 32.113.3
4+3 Tert.5260 8.841.5 31.917.7
8–10237 8.944.3 36.710.1
Lymph node metastasis
N02,646 16.342.8 29.711.10.0003
N+254 7.941.7 34.316.1
Preop. PSA level(ngml)
<4458 16.844.3 29.79.20.87
4–102,663 17.543.7 28.610.3
10–20990 19.343.6 27.69.5
>20378 16.146.3 28.88.7
Surgical margin
negative3,582 18.043.7 28.210.20.2884
positive917 16.745.0 29.88.5

Abbreviations: CENPF, centromere protein F; ERG, erythroblast transformation-specific (ETS)-related gene; PSA, PSA, prostate-specific antigen.

Table S2

Association between CENPF staining results and prostate cancer phenotype in ERG-positive tumors

ParameterCENPF
p-value
n evaluableNegative (%)Weak (%)Moderate (%)Strong (%)
All cancers3,5611.525.044.529.0
Tumor stage
pT22,0751.425.145.727.90.5856
Pt3a9761.724.842.431.0
pT3b-pT44961.625.243.529.6
Gleason grade
≤3+36922.328.949.419.4<0.0001
3+42,0551.224.043.830.9
3+4 Tert.51142.621.149.127.2
4+33591.120.339.039.6
4+3 Tert.52061.525.745.127.7
8–101332.335.339.822.6
Lymph node metastasis
N02,0401.823.943.431.00.5319
N+2340.926.942.729.5
Preop. PSA level (ng/ml)
<44921.027.844.926.20.4383
4–102,1591.424.444.230.0
10–206702.424.944.228.5
>202140.925.246.727.1
Surgical margin
Negative2,7731.624.944.828.70.8674
Positive7741.425.543.329.8

Abbreviations: CENPF, centromere protein F; ERG, erythroblast transformation-specific (ETS)-related gene; PSA, prostate-specific antigen.

  44 in total

1.  Bub1 is required for kinetochore localization of BubR1, Cenp-E, Cenp-F and Mad2, and chromosome congression.

Authors:  Victoria L Johnson; Maria I F Scott; Sarah V Holt; Deema Hussein; Stephen S Taylor
Journal:  J Cell Sci       Date:  2004-03-15       Impact factor: 5.285

2.  FoxM1 is required for execution of the mitotic programme and chromosome stability.

Authors:  Jamila Laoukili; Matthijs R H Kooistra; Alexandra Brás; Jos Kauw; Ron M Kerkhoven; Ashby Morrison; Hans Clevers; René H Medema
Journal:  Nat Cell Biol       Date:  2005-01-16       Impact factor: 28.824

3.  CytLEK1 is a regulator of plasma membrane recycling through its interaction with SNAP-25.

Authors:  Ryan D Pooley; Samyukta Reddy; Victor Soukoulis; Joseph T Roland; James R Goldenring; David M Bader
Journal:  Mol Biol Cell       Date:  2006-05-03       Impact factor: 4.138

4.  Cross-species regulatory network analysis identifies a synergistic interaction between FOXM1 and CENPF that drives prostate cancer malignancy.

Authors:  Alvaro Aytes; Antonina Mitrofanova; Celine Lefebvre; Mariano J Alvarez; Mireia Castillo-Martin; Tian Zheng; James A Eastham; Anuradha Gopalan; Kenneth J Pienta; Michael M Shen; Andrea Califano; Cory Abate-Shen
Journal:  Cancer Cell       Date:  2014-05-12       Impact factor: 31.743

5.  Genomic deletion of PTEN is associated with tumor progression and early PSA recurrence in ERG fusion-positive and fusion-negative prostate cancer.

Authors:  Antje Krohn; Tobias Diedler; Lia Burkhardt; Pascale-Sophie Mayer; Colin De Silva; Marie Meyer-Kornblum; Darja Kötschau; Pierre Tennstedt; Joseph Huang; Clarissa Gerhäuser; Malte Mader; Stefan Kurtz; Hüseyin Sirma; Fred Saad; Thomas Steuber; Markus Graefen; Christoph Plass; Guido Sauter; Ronald Simon; Sarah Minner; Thorsten Schlomm
Journal:  Am J Pathol       Date:  2012-06-13       Impact factor: 4.307

6.  Integrating Tertiary Gleason 5 Patterns into Quantitative Gleason Grading in Prostate Biopsies and Prostatectomy Specimens.

Authors:  Guido Sauter; Till Clauditz; Stefan Steurer; Corinna Wittmer; Franziska Büscheck; Till Krech; Florian Lutz; Maximilian Lennartz; Luisa Harms; Lisa Lawrenz; Christina Möller-Koop; Ronald Simon; Frank Jacobsen; Waldemar Wilczak; Sarah Minner; Maria Christina Tsourlakis; Viktoria Chirico; Sören Weidemann; Alexander Haese; Thomas Steuber; Georg Salomon; Michael Matiu; Eik Vettorazzi; Uwe Michl; Lars Budäus; Derya Tilki; Imke Thederan; Dirk Pehrke; Burkhard Beyer; Christoph Fraune; Cosima Göbel; Marie Heinrich; Manuela Juhnke; Katharina Möller; Ahmed Abdulwahab Abdullah Bawahab; Ria Uhlig; Hartwig Huland; Hans Heinzer; Markus Graefen; Thorsten Schlomm
Journal:  Eur Urol       Date:  2017-01-20       Impact factor: 20.096

7.  Molecular targets for tumour progression in gastrointestinal stromal tumours.

Authors:  N Koon; R Schneider-Stock; M Sarlomo-Rikala; J Lasota; M Smolkin; G Petroni; A Zaika; C Boltze; F Meyer; L Andersson; S Knuutila; M Miettinen; W El-Rifai
Journal:  Gut       Date:  2004-02       Impact factor: 23.059

8.  The prognostic impact of high Nijmegen breakage syndrome (NBS1) gene expression in ERG-negative prostate cancers lacking PTEN deletion is driven by KPNA2 expression.

Authors:  Katharina Grupp; Rebecca Boumesli; Maria Christina Tsourlakis; Christina Koop; Waldemar Wilczak; Meike Adam; Guido Sauter; Ronald Simon; Jakob Robert Izbicki; Markus Graefen; Hartwig Huland; Stefan Steurer; Thorsten Schlomm; Sarah Minner; Alexander Quaas
Journal:  Int J Cancer       Date:  2014-02-26       Impact factor: 7.396

9.  Clinical Utility of Quantitative Gleason Grading in Prostate Biopsies and Prostatectomy Specimens.

Authors:  Guido Sauter; Stefan Steurer; Till Sebastian Clauditz; Till Krech; Corinna Wittmer; Florian Lutz; Maximilian Lennartz; Tim Janssen; Nayira Hakimi; Ronald Simon; Mareike von Petersdorff-Campen; Frank Jacobsen; Katharina von Loga; Waldemar Wilczak; Sarah Minner; Maria Christina Tsourlakis; Viktoria Chirico; Alexander Haese; Hans Heinzer; Burkhard Beyer; Markus Graefen; Uwe Michl; Georg Salomon; Thomas Steuber; Lars Henrik Budäus; Elena Hekeler; Julia Malsy-Mink; Sven Kutzera; Christoph Fraune; Cosima Göbel; Hartwig Huland; Thorsten Schlomm
Journal:  Eur Urol       Date:  2015-11-02       Impact factor: 20.096

10.  Prognostic significance and therapeutic implications of centromere protein F expression in human nasopharyngeal carcinoma.

Authors:  Jing-Yan Cao; Li Liu; Shu-Peng Chen; Xing Zhang; Yan-Jun Mi; Zhi-Gang Liu; Man-Zhi Li; Hua Zhang; Chao-Nan Qian; Jian-Yong Shao; Li-Wu Fu; Yun-Fei Xia; Mu-Sheng Zeng
Journal:  Mol Cancer       Date:  2010-09-09       Impact factor: 27.401

View more
  7 in total

1.  Identification and Validation of Novel Genes in Anaplastic Thyroid Carcinoma via Bioinformatics Analysis.

Authors:  Shengnan Wang; Jing Wu; Congcong Guo; Hongxia Shang; Jinming Yao; Lin Liao; Jianjun Dong
Journal:  Cancer Manag Res       Date:  2020-10-08       Impact factor: 3.989

2.  Reduced anoctamin 7 (ANO7) expression is a strong and independent predictor of poor prognosis in prostate cancer.

Authors:  Andreas Marx; Lena Koopmann; Doris Höflmayer; Franziska Büscheck; Claudia Hube-Magg; Stefan Steurer; Till Eichenauer; Till S Clauditz; Waldemar Wilczak; Ronald Simon; Guido Sauter; Jakob R Izbicki; Hartwig Huland; Hans Heinzer; Markus Graefen; Alexander Haese; Thorsten Schlomm; Christian Bernreuther; Patrick Lebok; Sarah Bonk
Journal:  Cancer Biol Med       Date:  2021-02-15       Impact factor: 4.248

3.  Computational identification of biomarker genes for lung cancer considering treatment and non-treatment studies.

Authors:  Mona Maharjan; Raihanul Bari Tanvir; Kamal Chowdhury; Wenrui Duan; Ananda Mohan Mondal
Journal:  BMC Bioinformatics       Date:  2020-12-03       Impact factor: 3.169

4.  Identification of core genes associated with prostate cancer progression and outcome via bioinformatics analysis in multiple databases.

Authors:  Yutao Wang; Jianfeng Wang; Kexin Yan; Jiaxing Lin; Zhenhua Zheng; Jianbin Bi
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2020-03-31       Impact factor: 2.984

5.  TOP2A and CENPF are synergistic master regulators activated in cervical cancer.

Authors:  Beiwei Yu; Long Chen; Weina Zhang; Yue Li; Yibiao Zhang; Yuan Gao; Xianlin Teng; Libo Zou; Qian Wang; Hongtao Jia; Xiangtao Liu; Hui Zheng; Ping Hou; Hongyan Yu; Ying Sun; Zhiqin Zhang; Ping Zhang; Liqin Zhang
Journal:  BMC Med Genomics       Date:  2020-10-06       Impact factor: 3.063

6.  Upregulation of the heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein hnRNPA1 is an independent predictor of early biochemical recurrence in TMPRSS2:ERG fusion-negative prostate cancers.

Authors:  Katharina Möller; Anna Lena Wecker; Doris Höflmayer; Christoph Fraune; Georgia Makrypidi-Fraune; Claudia Hube-Magg; Martina Kluth; Stefan Steurer; Till S Clauditz; Waldemar Wilczak; Ronald Simon; Guido Sauter; Hartwig Huland; Hans Heinzer; Alexander Haese; Thorsten Schlomm; Sören Weidemann; Andreas M Luebke; Sarah Minner; Christian Bernreuther; Sarah Bonk; Andreas Marx
Journal:  Virchows Arch       Date:  2020-05-16       Impact factor: 4.064

7.  Exome sequencing identified six copy number variations as a prediction model for recurrence of primary prostate cancers with distinctive prognosis.

Authors:  Jie Liu; Jiajun Yan; Ruifang Mao; Guoping Ren; Xiaoyan Liu; Yanling Zhang; Jili Wang; Yan Wang; Meiling Li; Qingchong Qiu; Lin Wang; Guanfeng Liu; Shanshan Jin; Liang Ma; Yingying Ma; Na Zhao; Hongwei Zhang; Biaoyang Lin
Journal:  Transl Cancer Res       Date:  2020-04       Impact factor: 1.241

  7 in total

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