| Literature DB >> 30832661 |
Huiqin Zhuo1,2, Yan Zhao3, Xiao Cheng4, Mao Xu5,6, Lin Wang5,6, Lingyun Lin5,6, Zhi Lyu4, Xuehui Hong7,8, Jianchun Cai9,10.
Abstract
In lung cancer, antiangiogenic strategies targeting tumor-derived endothelial cells (TECs) afford a survival advantage, but the characteristics of TECs have not been comprehensively elucidated. Herein, high-purity (> 98%) TECs were obtained, and these cells retained expression of EC markers and exhibited high viability. ITRAQ-2DLC-MS/MS was performed to profile the proteome and the heterogeneity of ECs. Only 31 of 1820 identified proteins were differentially expressed between adenocarcinoma (ADC)- and squamous cell carcinoma (SCC)-derived TECs (TEC-A and TEC-S, respectively), and cadherin-2 (CDH2) was the most significantly upregulated protein in TEC-A samples. Positive immunostaining for CDH2 (score > 3) was significantly more frequent in the endothelium of ADC tissues than in that of SCC tissues. Loss- or gain-of-function analysis showed that CDH2 significantly promoted in vitro and in vivo angiogenesis and sensitivity to the antagonist exherin. The MAPK/ERK and MAPK/JNK signaling pathways may play crucial roles in CDH2-induced HIF-1α/VEGF-mediated angiogenesis. Moreover, high CDH2 expression in TECs was significantly associated with tumor stage, visceral pleural metastasis, and decreased overall survival in patients with ADC but not SCC. Together, these data indicate the importance of CDH2 in angiogenesis and highlight its potential both for antiangiogenic therapy and as a candidate prognostic marker for ADC.Entities:
Keywords: CDH2 expression; EC proteome profile; Heterogeneity; Non-small cell lung carcinoma; Tumor-derived endothelial cell
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30832661 PMCID: PMC6399986 DOI: 10.1186/s12943-019-0987-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cancer ISSN: 1476-4598 Impact factor: 27.401
Fig. 1Assaying the expression of endothelial markers and AcLDL uptake in normal tissue-, paratumor- and tumor-derived ECs. a Positive immunoreactivity with antibodies specific for CD31 (red), CD34 (green), CD144 (green), CD105 (green), and VWF (red) using NEC-A (normal), PEC-A (paratumor), and TEC-A (tumor) tissues from six patients with lung ADC. Nuclei were stained with DAPI (blue). b Expression of the EC markers CD31 and VWF and the microvascular EC marker CD105 in NEC-A, PEC-A, and TEC-A tissues was evaluated by flow cytometry. c The mRNA expression levels of CD105, CD31, CD144, VEGFR1, APN, CD11b, CD45b, and α-SMA in NEC-A, PEC-A, and TEC-A tissues. The data were normalized to GAPDH expression and shown as the fold change compared to NECs. d Alexa Fluor® 488 AcLDL uptake assays. Uptake efficiency in NEC-A, PEC-A, TEC-A, and TEC-S (from tumor tissues of six lung SCC patients) was detected by flow cytometry
Fig. 2Protein expression patterns and heterogeneity of CDH2 and Piezo1 expression in ADC- and SCC-derived ECs. a Cluster map comparing the protein expression patterns of NEC-A, PEC-A, TEC-A, and TEC-S. Functional category gene enrichment tests were performed using heatmap.2 and the gregmisc package in the R statistical environment (http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/gplots). Red indicates higher expression levels, and blue indicates lower expression levels in the two cell types. b The first and second principle components, PC1 and PC2, from the principle component analysis (PCA). The complete proteomic data sets for the four EC groups were subjected to PCA analysis to capture the maximum variance among ECs, using the SIMCA-P + V12.0.1 software package. The principal components (proteins from the original four groups) were marked with the corresponding name and group color. c Migration assay. The migration of NEC (pool of NEC-A and NEC-S), TEC-S, and TEC-A cells (1.8 × 104) was detected using transwell chambers (6.5 mm, 8.0-μm), after induction by M131 medium supplemented with 20% or 3% MVGS or tumor cell CM at 37 °C for 12 h. To study EC-induced VSMC migration, cocultivation was established by plating VSMCs (2.4 × 104) onto the filter inserts and transferring to the EC monolayer (5.0 × 106), then incubating in M131 medium supplemented with 0.2% fetal bovine serum at 37 °C for 16 h. The cells were stained with 20% Giemsa solution. The number of migrated cells was counted in five randomly selected fields under a microscope (200×). d Heterogeneity of CDH2 and Piezo1 expression in ADC- and SCC-derived ECs. Expression of Piezo1 or CDH2 in HUVECs after being cultured in CM-1, CM-2 (SPC-A-1 or L-78 cell-conditioned medium, respectively), Coculture 1 (cocultured with the ADC cell line SPC-A-1), or Coculture 2 (cocultured with the SCC cell line L-78). e Consecutive sections were prepared to detect CD105, CDH2, and Piezo1 expression in the endothelial cells of tumor samples from 68 patients (36 with SCC and 32 with ADC), and CD105 expression was detected as a positive control. The fields shown in dotted lines were enlarged two-fold in the right column, and microvessels are identified using black arrows, based on positive staining for CD105. Expression of Piezo1 or CDH2 in ADC- and SCC-derived ECs, and CDH2 in ECs from tumor tissues (T) and paired paratumor (P) and normal (N) tissues of 32 patients with ADC were statistically analyzed. The intensity of staining (IS) was scored as 0: negative, 1: weak, 2: moderate and 3: strong. The percentage of positive (PP) cells was scored as 0 (PP ≤ 5%), 1 (6% ≤ PP ≤ 25%), 2 (26% ≤ PP ≤ 50%), 3 (51% ≤ PP ≤ 75%), and 4 (PP ≥ 75%). The staining in endothelial cells was scored by multiplying the PP by the IS (immunoreactive score = PP × IS): 0 (score: 0–2, negative), 1+ (score: 3–4, moderately positive), 2++ (score: 5–6, strongly positive), and 3+++ (score: 7–8, very strongly positive)
Fig. 3Aberrantly increased CDH2 protein expression in ADC-derived ECs by IHC analysis in 218 tumor tissues from lung cancer patients (141 with ADC and 77 with SCC). a IHC images of heterogenous CDH2 localization and CDH2 expression scores for cancer cells from SCC and ADC samples. IHC staining for SCC and ADC cancer cells was scored by PP × IS. CDH2 expression localization in cancer cells was further rescored by the intensity of staining (IS, score: 0~3) in membrane, cytoplasm and nucleus. b, c High CDH2 expression in TECs from ADC tissues. The significantly positive relationship between CDH2 expression and tumor stage, as well as typical IHC images displaying increased CDH2 expression during tumor progression are shown. Microvessels are indicated with black arrow, based on positive staining for CD105. d The overall survival of patients with lung cancer and differential CDH2 expression in TECs. The prognostic value of CDH2 expression was investigated in 139 of 218 patients with lung cancer with respect to survival information