Literature DB >> 31267364

Peptidyl Arginine Deiminase, Type II (PADI2) Is Involved in Urothelial Bladder Cancer.

Bao-Shan Gao1, Chun-Shu Rong2, Hong-Mei Xu3, Tao Sun1, Jie Hou1, Ying Xu4.   

Abstract

Peptidyl arginine deiminase, type II (PADI2) expression has been shown to potentiate multiple different carcinogenesis pathway including breast carcinoma and spontaneous skin neoplasia. The objective of this study was to examine the role of PADI2 in urothelial bladder cancer which has not been evaluated previously. Analysis of mutation and genome amplification of bladder cancer within The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) showed that PADI2 is both mutated and amplified in a cohort of bladder cancer patients, with the largest number of mutations detected in urothelial bladder cancer. Even though PADI2 expression was not significantly correlated to survival in bladder cancer patients, it was significantly overexpressed at the mRNA and protein levels, as revealed by TCGA data and immunohistochemistry analysis, respectively. PADI2 showed wide expression pattern in bladder cancer tissues but was hardly detected in tumor adjacent normal tissue. RNAi mediated silencing of PADI2 in the bladder cancer cell line T24 did not result in a change of proliferation. Interestingly knockdown of PADI2 expression did not affect Snail1 protein, which is associated with metastatic progression, in these cells. However, PADI2 silencing remarkably attenuated both in vitro migration and invasion- in T24 cells indicating a Snail1-independent effect of PADI2 on invasive potential of urothelial bladder cancer. This was further corroborated by in vivo xenograft assays where PADI2 shRNA harboring T24 cells did not have detectable tumors by week 4 as compared to robust tumors in the control Luciferase shRNA harboring cells. PADI2 silencing did not affect proliferation rates and hence this would suggest that PADI2 knockdown is perhaps causing increased apoptosis as well as transition through the cell cycle, which needs to be confirmed in future studies. Our results reveal a yet undefined role of PADI2 as an oncogene in urothelial bladder cancer.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Overexpressed; PADI2; Tissue microarray analysis; Urothelial bladder cancer

Year:  2019        PMID: 31267364     DOI: 10.1007/s12253-019-00687-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pathol Oncol Res        ISSN: 1219-4956            Impact factor:   3.201


  1 in total

1.  Down-regulation of PADI2 prevents proliferation and epithelial-mesenchymal transition in ovarian cancer through inhibiting JAK2/STAT3 pathway in vitro and in vivo, alone or in combination with Olaparib.

Authors:  Lidong Liu; Zhiwei Zhang; Guoxiang Zhang; Ting Wang; Yingchun Ma; Wei Guo
Journal:  J Transl Med       Date:  2020-09-20       Impact factor: 5.531

  1 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.