| Literature DB >> 34257584 |
Milan Dastych1, Frantisek Hubatka2,3, Pavlina Turanek-Knotigova2,3, Josef Masek2, Radek Kroupa1, Milan Raška4, Jaroslav Turanek2,3,5,6, Lubomir Prochazka2.
Abstract
Background and aims: The majority of colorectal cancers arise from detectable adenomatous or serrated lesions. Here we demonstrate how deregulated alternative splicing of CD44 gene in diseased colon mucosa results in downregulation of standard isoform of CD44 gene (CD44s) and upregulation of variant isoform CD44v8-10. Our aim is to show that upregulation of CD44v8-10 isoform is a possible marker of precancerous lesion in human colon.Entities:
Keywords: CD44 isoforms; RNA splicing; cancer markers; colon polyps; colorectal precancerosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34257584 PMCID: PMC8262190 DOI: 10.3389/pore.2021.614281
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathol Oncol Res ISSN: 1219-4956 Impact factor: 3.201
FIGURE 1Structure of human CD44 protein (A). The blue line represents alternative region that is completely missing in CD44s isoform. Variable region of CD44 is a site of heavy O-glycosylation. The globular amino terminal domain of CD44 contains three disulfide bonds and two hyaluronan binding motifs [6]. (B) Representative endoscopic images of colon adenomas we sampled. The top image displays serrated adenoma while the bottom image displays conventional adenoma. The images are taken in two modes, i.e., white light and narrow band image (NBI).
Clinical significance of various CD44 isoforms in certain cancer types. A reduced list of CD44 prognostic markers in various cancer types. met., metastasis; neg., negative.
| Cancer type | Isoform | Clinical significance |
|---|---|---|
| Lung cancer | CD44v6, CD44s | Metastasis, survival [ |
| Breast cancer | Pan-CD44 (all isoforms) | Differentiation, neg. prognosis [ |
| Prostate cancer | CD44v6, ↓CD44s | Met., prognosis [ |
| Colorectal cancer | ↓CD44s, CD44v6, CD44v9 | Met., prognosis [ |
| Bladder cancer | CD44v8-10 | Neg. prognosis [ |
FIGURE 2Overexpression of CD44v8-10 in colon polyps (A,B) Position of the selected primers in CD44 mRNA exon structure. Constant exons (always transcribed) are marked orange. Variable exons are marked blue. (A) 8v8 primers were used for detection of inclusion of variable exons v8-10, i.e., CD44v8-10. Product size of 398 bp confirms transcription of variable exons v8-10. (B) CD44s1 primers span the whole variable region of the CD44 gene. Product size of 368bp relates to the standard isoform of CD44 (CD44s). Product size >368 bp indicates inclusion of variable exons. (C,D) Agarose gel resolution of end-point PCR products of 8v8 primers (C) and CD44s1 primers (D) in polyp and healthy tissue samples. Actin was used as a loading control. PCR products for actin are displayed below. The arrows indicate product representing CD44v8-10 (C) and CD44s (D). Relative quantification using densitometric analysis of agarose gels is represented by the bar graph (E). An agarose gel after resolution of the PCR products of CD44v3 primers that start at exon v3 and finish at the constant region (F). Keratinocytes were used as a positive control for exon inclusion while fibroblast express mostly CD44s. Increasing size of PCR products means higher number of variable exons included in the final mRNA transcript. Yellow dashed line delineates grouping of two gels into one picture. Samples from patients with sessile serrated adenoma (SSA) are marked with asterisk (*); samples of villous adenomas are marked (V); samples of tubular adenomas are marked (T); samples of tubulovillous adenomas are marked (TV).
FIGURE 3CD44v8-10 overexpression in colon polyps. Position of real time primers within the CD44 mRNA transcript of CD44v8-10 (A) and CD44s (B). Reverse primers span exon junctions and anneal only if the following exon junctions occur C5+V8 (A) or C5+C15 (B). Verification of appropriate size of PCR products was performed in random samples using 3% agarose gels (C). Relative expression levels of CD44s and CD44v8-10 in colon polyps compared to adjacent healthy mucosa (D). Statistical values are calculated using one sample t test. Column mean is significantly different from hypothetical value 1.0; p = 0.018 for v8-10; p < 0.001 for CD44s number of patients N = 50.
FIGURE 4Protein expression. Expression of CD44s was checked on several larger samples using western blotting. The level of CD44s expression significantly drops in polyp samples. The level of protein expression was also estimated using densitometric analysis and put on a bar graph, bottom panel. Expression of CD44v8-10 is presented by bands at around 110 kDa. Actin was used as a loading control. “p” behind the number indicates polyp tissue.
FIGURE 5Expression of CD44 receptor in the mucosa of adenomatous polyp. Biopsy specimens of colon polyp were frozen sectioned and immunolabeled using pan specific anti-CD44 and anti-CD44v10 IgG. Nuclei were stained with DAPI (Blue). Nonspecific binding of secondary FITC IgG was checked (upper right panel). The data indicate that the most of CD44 protein is expressed in the epithelial cells of the colon crypt base.
FIGURE 6mRNA levels of some known splicing regulators. SR-like proteins and non SR-like ESRPs were tested in the cohort of 50 patients using real time PCR. ESRP-1 was almost two-fold overexpressed in colon polyps in 50 patients (A). Expression level of ESRP-2 was similar in both types of colon mucosa. Relative expression levels of SR-like proteins in colon polyps compared to normal mucosa (B). Relative expression levels of ESRP-1 and ESRP-2 in three patients whose polyps had the lowest rate of alternative splicing (C). A graphical overview of suggested mechanism running in the background of ASP of CD44 in colon polyps (D). The yellow background color highlights the site responsible for aberrant alternative splicing. The scheme was taken from our previous publication [6].
FIGURE 7HA-FITC binds to CD44 receptor. The upper right panel of immunoblots shows CD44s protein expression in H1299, T47D cells and cells extracted from adenomatous (32p) and healthy colon (32) mucosa using anti-CD44 IgG and anti-actin IgG as a loading control. The part of the verification western blot was also published in Ref. 35. The histograms show fluorescence intensity of cells incubated with FITC labelled hyaluronan, natural ligand of CD44s receptor. CD44 non-expressing T47D cells were used as a negative control (black line); H1299 cells were used as a positive control for CD44-HA interaction (blue line); Cells extracted from the colon polyp (red line); cells extracted from healthy colon mucosa (green line). The histogram images are representatives of three independent experiments.