Αρχειοθήκη ιστολογίου

Τετάρτη 5 Μαΐου 2021

Comprehensive analysis of multi-omics data of recurrent gliomas identifies a recurrence-related signature as a novel prognostic marker

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Am J Cancer Res. 2021 Apr 15;11(4):1226-1246. eCollection 2021.

ABSTRACT

Tumor recurrence is a common clinical dilemma in diffuse gliomas. We aimed to identify a recurrence-related signature to predict the prognosis for glioma patients. In the public Chinese Glioma Genome Atlas dataset, we enrolled multi-omics data including genome, epigenome and transcriptome across primary and recurrent gliomas. We included RNA sequencing data from the batch 1 patients (325 patients) as the training set, while RNA sequencing data from the batch 2 patients (693 patients) were selected as the validation set. The R language was used for subsequent analysis. Compared with primary gliomas, more somatic mutations and copy number alterations were revealed in recurrent gliomas. In recurrent gliomas, we identified 113 genes whose methylation levels were significantly different from those of the primary glioma. Through differential expression analysis between primary and recurrent gliomas, we screened 121 recurrence-related genes. Based on these 121 gene expression profiles, consensus clustering of 325 patients yielded two robust groups with different molecular and prognostic features. We developed a recurrence-related risk signature with the lasso regression algorithm. High-risk group had shorter survival and earlier tumor recurrence than the low-risk group. Compared with traditional indicators, the signature showed better prognostic value. In addition, we constructed a nomogram model to predict glioma survival. Functional characteristics analysis found that the signature was associated with cell division and cell cycle. Immune analysis suggested that immunosuppressive status and macrophages might promote glioma recurrence. We demonstrated a novel 18-gene signature that could effectively predict recurrence and prognosis for glioma patients.

PMID:33948355 | PMC:PMC8085869

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CAN017, a novel anti-HER3 antibody, exerted great potency in mouse avatars of esophageal squamous cell carcinoma with NRG1 as a biomarker

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Am J Cancer Res. 2021 Apr 15;11(4):1697-1708. eCollection 2021.

ABSTRACT

CAN017 (AV-203), a novel anti-HER3 antibody, exerts very promising anti-tumor activities in several human tumor models. The aim of this study was to further investigated the efficacy and possible responsive biomarkers of CAN017 in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) with Chinese characteristics. Two separate cohorts of ESCC patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models including 24 (cohort 1 as training models, from Crown Bioscience Inc.) and 22 (cohort 2 as validating models, from Peking University Cancer Hospital) models, respectively, were used to study the efficacy and safety of CAN017, as well as the correlation of NRG1 expression to the response of CAN017. In cohort 1, all PDX models showed good tolerance to CAN017 and 8 out of 24 (33.3%) PDX models responded to CAN017 with tumor growth inhibition (TGI) ≥70% compared to controls. Furthermore, the efficacy o f CAN017 was positively correlated with NRG1 expression and the response rates in cohort 1 were 73% (8/11) versus 0% (0/13) in NRG1 high and low expression models, respectively. These results were also validated in PDX models of cohort 2 indicated as the powerful anti-tumor activity of CAN017 in PDX models with NRG1 high expression. In our study, HER3-targeting therapy was first demonstrated to have potency in inhibiting ESCC tumor growth, and NRG1 served as a predictive biomarker to screen patients in future clinical trials.

PMID:33948383 | PMC:PMC8085865

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Decursin inhibits cell growth and autophagic flux in gastric cancer via suppression of cathepsin C

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Am J Cancer Res. 2021 Apr 15;11(4):1304-1320. eCollection 2021.

ABSTRACT

Autophagy plays an important role in the survival of cancer cells under stressful conditions, such as nutrient or oxygen deficiency. Therefore, autophagy inhibition is being considered as a novel therapeutic strategy for cancer. Decursin is a natural compound derived from Angelica gigas; it has been used in the treatment of various diseases, including cancer. However, the mechanism by which decursin regulates autophagy in gastric cancer and other carcinomas remains unclear. Here, we demonstrated that decursin reduced the growth and induced cell cycle arrest in gastric cancer cells in vitro. Decursin blocked autophagic flux by reducing the expression of lysosomal protein cathepsin C (CTSC) and attenuating its activity, thereby causing autophagic dysregulation (i.e., accumulation of LC3 and SQSTM1). Decursin also inhibited cell proliferation and cell c ycle progression by inhibiting CTSC and E2F3, both of which were linked to gastric cancer aggressiveness. The antitumor effects of decursin were confirmed in vivo. We established spheroid and patient-derived organoid models and found that decursin decreased the growth of spheroids and patient-derived gastric organoids, as well as modulated the expression of CTSC and autophagy-related proteins. Hence, our findings uncovered a previously unknown mechanism by which decursin regulates cell growth and autophagy and suggests that decursin may act as a potential therapeutic agent that simultaneously inhibits cell growth and autophagy.

PMID:33948359 | PMC:PMC8085838

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Serial assessment of circulating T lymphocyte phenotype and receptor repertoire during treatment of non-muscle invasive bladder cancer with adoptive T cell immunotherapy

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Am J Cancer Res. 2021 Apr 15;11(4):1709-1718. eCollection 2021.

ABSTRACT

Recurrence and progression of non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC), frequent despite the availability of multiple treatment modalities, may be partly explained by the presence of immunosuppressive cell populations. We hypothesized that progression of disease could be prevented by the administration of an activated T cell immunotherapy (ACT) at time points when immunosuppressive populations increased in peripheral blood. In an N-of-1 study, a patient with multiple primary bladder high grade urothelial carcinomas, previously treated with standard local resection and chemotherapy but with evidence of progression, received ACT consisting of dendritic cells mixed with cytokine induced killer cells (DC/CIK), intravenously 18 times over a 6 year period at indicated time of observed increases in peripheral blood immunosuppressive CD8+/CD28- cel ls. Peripheral blood was analyzed for T cell phenotype by flow cytometry, T cell receptor (TCR) repertoire, and circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) by next generation sequencing (NGS) at the time of each infusion. Cystoscopy and pelvic CT scans were performed at routine intervals to assess clinical status of disease. There has been no recurrence or metastasis of urothelial carcinoma. Peripheral blood cytotoxic T cells and unique TCR clones increased and suppressive T cell populations decreased after DC/CIK infusions evidenced by the two more proof-of concept cases. ctDNA analysis detected mutations in six genes (ARID1B, MYCN, CDH23, SETD2, NOTCH4 and FAT1) which appeared at different times, but all of them disappeared after the DC-CIK infusions. These data suggest that DC/CIK infusions may be associated with beneficial changes in T cell phenotype, TCR repertoire, decreases in circulating tumor DNA and sustained recurrence-free survival.

PMID:33948384 | PMC:PMC8085852

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LHPP impedes energy metabolism by inducing ubiquitin-mediated degradation of PKM2 in glioblastoma

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Am J Cancer Res. 2021 Apr 15;11(4):1369-1390. eCollection 2021.

ABSTRACT

Phospholysine phosphohistidine inorganic pyrophosphate phosphatase (LHPP) is a new-found tumor suppressor in a variety of tumors. While, it is still unknown about its role in glioma. In this study, we found that LHPP is abnormally decreasing or absent in glioblastoma, and the low expression of LHPP is associated with poor median survival in glioma patients. Functional assay revealed that LHPP-overexpression significantly inhibited U87MG and U118MG growth in vitro and in vivo. As to the mechanism, mass-spectrometric analysis indicated that the LHPP interacting proteins were mainly enriched in regulation of energy metabolism, including Carbon metabolism, Oxidative phosphorylation, and Glycolysis. Seahorse assay and metabolites detection confirmed that LHPP-overexpression obviously impeded glycolysis and respiration in U87MG and U118MG cells. For the further study, w estern blot assay showed that the protein level of PKM2 at dimeric, tetrameric, and total protein, were all decreased significantly, and its enzymatic activity was decreased as well. ChIP and RNAseq integrated analysis indicated that the decreased protein level of PKM2 was independent of PKM2 transcription, and LHPP did not reprogram transcription level of metabolic genome. Co-IP and immunofluorescence assay manifested that LHPP interacted with PKM2, and this interaction interfered the protein stability, then induced ubiquitin-mediated degradation of PKM2. Rescue assay confirmed that restoring the expression of PKM2 effectively reversed the restrained energy metabolism and the inhibited cancer cell growth caused by LHPP-overexpression in U87MG and U118MG cells. Taking together, we demonstrated that LHPP impedes the glycolysis and respiration during energy metabolic process via inducing ubiquitin-mediated degradation of PKM2, thus inhibits the growth of glioblastoma.

PMID:33948363 | PMC:PMC8085851

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Contemporary external beam radiotherapy boost or high dose-rate brachytherapy boost for cervical cancer: a propensity-score-matched, nationwide, population-based cohort study

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Am J Cancer Res. 2021 Apr 15;11(4):1719-1732. eCollection 2021.

ABSTRACT

To estimate the survival effects of contemporary external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) boost modalities (intensity-modulated radiation therapy or volumetric modulated arc therapy) and high dose-rate brachytherapy (HDR-BT) boost in patients with cervical cancer (CC). Patients who had been diagnosed as having CC were recruited from the Taiwan Cancer Registry Database. Propensity score matching was performed, and Cox proportional-hazards model curves were used to analyze the all-cause mortality of patients who received standard whole-pelvis irradiation with different boost modalities. The matching process yielded a final cohort of 1,630 patients (815 in the EBRT boost and HDR-BT boost groups, respectively) eligible for further analysis. The multivariate Cox regression analyses indicated that the adjusted hazard ratio (95% confidence intervals) for EBRT boost compared wit h HDR-BT boost was 1.62 (1.43-1.84). Multivariable analysis revealed that the independent poor prognostic factors of all-cause mortality among patients with CC were adenocarcinoma, no chemotherapy, Charlson comorbidity index score ≥ 1, age ≥ 60 years, and advanced International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics stage. HDR-BT boost may be more beneficial than contemporary EBRT boost in selected patients with CC.

PMID:33948385 | PMC:PMC8085 872

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Genetically determined elevated C-reactive protein associated with primary colorectal cancer risk: Mendelian randomization with lifestyle interactions

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Am J Cancer Res. 2021 Apr 15;11(4):1733-1753. eCollection 2021.

ABSTRACT

Systemic inflammation-related etiologic pathways via inflammatory cytokines in the development of colorectal cancer (CRC) have not been convincingly determined and may be confounded by lifestyle factors or reverse causality. We investigated the genetically predicted C-reactive protein (CRP) phenotype in the potential causal pathway of primary CRC risk in postmenopausal women in a Mendelian randomization (MR) framework. We employed individual-level data of the Women's Health Initiative Database for Genotypes and Phenotypes Study, which consists of 5 genome-wide association (GWA) studies, including 10,142 women, 737 of whom developed primary CRC. We examined 61 GWA single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with CRP by using weighted/penalized MR weighted-medians and MR gene-environment interactions that allow some relaxation of the strict variable requiremen ts and attenuate the heterogeneous estimates of outlying SNPs. In lifestyle-stratification analyses, genetically determined CRP exhibited its effects on the decreased CRC risk in non-viscerally obese and high-fat diet subgroups. In contrast, genetically driven CRP was associated with an increased risk for CRC in women who smoked ≥ 15 cigarettes/day, with significant interaction of the gene-smoking relationship. Further, a substantially increased risk of CRC induced by CRP was observed in relatively short-term users (< 5 years) of estrogen (E)-only and also longer-term users (5 to > 10 years) of E plus progestin. Our findings may provide novel evidence on immune-related etiologic pathways connected to CRC risk and suggest the possible use of CRP as a CRC-predictive biomarker in women with particular behaviors and CRP marker-informed interventions to reduce CRC risk.

PMID:33948386 | PMC:PMC8085861

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Clinical endpoints in oncology - a primer

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Am J Cancer Res. 2021 Apr 15;11(4):1121-1131. eCollection 2021.

ABSTRACT

Clinical endpoints are essential for assessing the safety and efficacy of new cancer therapies. They are used by oncologists to help guide clinical decision making. While overall survival (OS) has frequently been regarded as the "gold standard" primary clinical endpoint, it's utility is constrained by several disadvantages. The time-consuming nature of trials using OS has led to a recent push to explore surrogate clinical endpoints and their potential to serve as primary clinical endpoints in lieu of OS. Additionally, it is becoming evident that other endpoints add valuable information about quality of life and treatment failure as their use is becoming increasingly prevalent in oncology clinical trials. Without a doubt, the use of clinical endpoints will continue to expand and evolve as new cancer therapies are developed and novel treatments, including immunother apy, draw interest. This review explores the roles of primary and surrogate clinical endpoints as well as the benefits and drawbacks of each specific endpoint. In addition, it directly compares the unique features of each suggesting some of the specific uses each one fulfills.

PMID:33948349 | PMC:PMC8085844

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The shifting landscape of genetic alterations separating endometriosis and ovarian endometrioid carcinoma

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Am J Cancer Res. 2021 Apr 15;11(4):1754-1769. eCollection 2021.

ABSTRACT

Ovarian cancer is one of the most common cancers worldwide, and is associated with a prior diagnosis of endometriosis in several cases. Our aim was to correlate genetic and methylation profile of ovarian endometrioid ovarian cancer and endometriosis patients. We evaluated the genetic profile of 50 ovarian endometriosis and 20 ovarian endometrioid carcinoma samples using next generation sequencing technology. In addition, the DNA methylation profile was evaluated for both cohorts of patients. We observed several mutated genes that were common for both types of patients, but we also identified mutated genes that were characteristic for each group: JAK3, KRAS and RB1 for endometriosis; and ATM, BRAF, CDH1, EGFR, NRAS, RET and SMO for ovarian endometrioid cancer. Also we idenfied genes that are highly methylated only in endometriosis sample s (PYCARD, RARB, RB1, IL2, CFTR, CD44 and CDH13) and MLH3 gene was methylated only in endometrioid ovarian carcinoma samples. Also, BRCA1, CADM1, PAX6 and PAH genes are mainly methylated in endometrioid ovarian carcinoma patients. We identified a correlation for the cancer group between tumor stage, copy number aberrations and the presence of metastases; more specifically, the presence of BRCA1 pathogenic variants was correlated with tumor differentiation degree, TP53 variants and copy number aberrations. This study was able to demonstrate the presence of similar pathways being altered in both endometriosis and ovarian endometrioid carcinoma, which could mean that a diagnosis of endometriosis could be an early marker for cancer diagnosis. In addition, we showed that GATA2 hypomethylation, ATM hypermethylation, CREM hypomethylation, higher tumor differentiation degree or higher tumor stage is associated with a poor prognosis in patients with ovarian endometrioid carcinoma.

PMID:33948387 | PMC:PMC8085850

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An immune-related signature that to improve prognosis prediction of breast cancer

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Am J Cancer Res. 2021 Apr 15;11(4):1267-1285. eCollection 2021.

ABSTRACT

Although the classic molecular subtype of breast cancer (BRCA) has been widely used in clinical diagnosis, as a highly heterogeneous malignant tumor, the classic scheme is not enough to accurately predict the prognosis of breast cancer patients. Immune cells in the tumor microenvironment (TME) are thought to play a paramount role in tumor development and driving poor prognosis. In this study, we aimed to develop a TME-associated, immune-related signature to improve prognosis prediction of BRCA. BRCA_OURS enriched transcriptomic RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) of tumor tissue was acquired from 43 breast cancer patients before any treatment. On the immune gene profiles of 43 patients from BRCA_OURS and 932 BRCA patients from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), we identified a robust immune-related signature including one positive coefficients gene (IL-10) and other 9 genes (C1 4orf79, C1orf168, C1orf226, CELSR2, FABP7, FGFBP1, KLRB1, PLEKHO1, and RAC2), of which the negative coefficients suggesting higher expression were correlated with better prognosis. Based on the expression of these genes, patients were grouped into the high- and low-risk group with significant overall survival (OS) (P<0.0001). The high-risk group was likely to have inferior outcomes related to several important cancer-associated pathways, including mobilizing more Golgi vesicle-mediated transport and intensive DNA double-strand breaking, which are closely related to the infiltration of immune cells and holds the key for further growing and metastasizing. Collectively, our results highlight that the immunological value within BRCA is an essential determinant of prognostic factor. Our signature may provide an effective risk stratification tool for clinical prognosis assessment of patients with BRCA.

PMID:33948357 | PMC:PMC8085862

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Natural killer cells: of-the-shelf cytotherapy for cancer immunosurveillance

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Am J Cancer Res. 2021 Apr 15;11(4):1770-1791. eCollection 2021.

ABSTRACT

Natural killer (NK) cells are advantaged innate cytotoxic lymphocytes with characteristics of tumor immunosurveillance and microorganism elimination. Distinguish from the adaptive T and B lymphocytes, the autologous or allogeneic NK cells efficaciously fulfil the function of combating transformed hematological malignancies and metastatic solid tumors via the proverbial mechanisms including direct cytolytic effect and antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC) as well as paracrine effects dispense with antigen presentation. Herein, we review the candidate sources (e.g., peripheral blood, umbilical cord blood, placental blood, cell lines and stem cells) for large-scale and clinical-grade NK cell manufacturing, ex vivo cultivation (feeder-, cytokine cocktail- or physicochemical irritation-dependent strategies) for NK cell persistence and activation. Further more, we also figure out the promising prospects as well as the accompanied challenges of NK cell- or chimeric antigen receptor-transduced NK (CAR-NK) cell-based adoptive immunotherapy in standardizations for industrialized preparation and clinical practices.

PMID:33948388 | PMC:PMC8085843

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