Regenerating islet-derived family, member 4 (Reg IV) is a candidate marker for cancer and inflammatory bowel disease. In the present study, immunohistochemical analysis of Reg IV was performed in various human neoplastic (n = 289) and non-neoplastic tissues. In the stomach, foveolar epithelium was negative for Reg IV, whereas goblet cells of intestinal metaplasia and neuroendocrine cells at the base of intestinal metaplasia expressed Reg IV. Neuroendocrine cells of the small intestine and colon showed strong expression of Reg IV, whereas goblet cells of the small intestine and colon showed weak or no expression of Reg IV. Insulin-producing beta cells of the endocrine pancreas were positive for Reg IV. Among 143 gastric adenocarcinomas, Reg IV expression was detected in 42 (29.4%) and was associated with both the intestinal mucin phenotype and neuroendocrine differentiation. No association was found between Reg IV expression and clinical characteristics such as tumour stage and patient prognosis. Of 36 colorectal adenocarcinomas, 13 (36.1%) were positive for Reg IV, which was associated with tumour stage (p = 0.0379, Fisher's exact test). Expression of Reg IV was detected in 14 (93.3%) of 15 colorectal carcinoid tumours. Reg IV expression was also detected in 5 (21.7%) of 23 ductal adenocarcinomas of the pancreas. In contrast, lung cancers (n = 30) and breast cancers (n = 30) did not express Reg IV. This is the first immunohistochemical analysis of the expression and distribution of Reg IV protein in human tumours. These data suggest that Reg IV is expressed by gastrointestinal and pancreatic tumours, including adenocarcinomas and carcinoid tumours, and that Reg IV is associated with intestinal and neuroendocrine differentiation of the stomach and gastric carcinoma.
In the study of apoptosis initiated by various signals including ligands binding to cell membrane receptors such as Fas and TNFRI, the sphingomyelin pathway and its resulting metabolites, the sphingolipids, have been suggested to be involved in the signaling pathway. In earlier studies we presented data which indicated that sphingosine (Sph) itself was increased during apoptosis induced by phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) in HL60 cells and tumor necrosis factor (TNF) in neutrophils, and when added exogenously was able to induce apoptosis. We report here that Sph and its methylated derivative N,N,-dimethylsphingosine (DMS) are able to induce apoptosis in cancer cells of both hematopoietic and carcinoma origin. In human leukemic cell lines CMK-7, HL60 and U937, treatment with 20 microM Sph for 6 hr caused apoptosis in up to 90% of cells. Human colonic carcinoma cells HT29, HRT18, MKN74 and COLO205 were shown to be more susceptible to apoptosis upon addition of DMS (>50%) than of Sph (<50%), yet were weakly or not sensitive to N,N,N-trimethylsphingosine (TMS). Under the same conditions, in the presence of serum, neither Sph-1-phosphate nor ceramide analogues C2-, C6- or C8-ceramide were able to induce apoptosis in any cell lines. However, in the absence of serum, ceramide analogues induced apoptosis in leukemia cell lines after 18 hr, yet much less so than Sph or DMS. Furthermore, apoptosis induced by Sph or DMS could not be inhibited by the ceramide synthase inhibitor fumonisin B1. Apoptosis was not induced by sphingolipids in primary culture cells, such as HUVEC or rat mesangial cells, but was apparent in transformed rat mesangial cells. Additionally, apoptosis induced by Sph, DMS or C2Cer was inhibited by protease inhibitors. Our data further support the evidence that the catabolic pathway of sphingomyelin involving Sph and other metabolites is an integral part of the apoptosis pathway.
Objective: Regenerating islet-derived family, member 4 (regenerating gene type IV, Reg IV) is overexpressed in colorectal cancer (CRC). The aim of this study was to investigate the diagnostic utility of Reg IV determination in sera from patients with CRC. Methods: We examined the expression and distribution of Reg IV in CRC by immunohistochemistry and determined Reg IV levels in sera from patients with CRC by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Results: Immunostaining revealed that 23 of 80 (29%) CRC cases were positive for Reg IV. CRC cases with metastatic recurrence in the liver showed more frequently Reg IV staining than those without (p = 0.0102). Patients with CRC showing Reg IV staining had a significantly worse survival than those without Reg IV staining (p = 0.0117). Preoperatively, serum Reg IV concentrations were not elevated in CRC patients at stage 0–III, being in contrast to the significantly increased preoperative levels in stage IV CRC patients with liver metastasis. Conclusion: These results suggest that Reg IV is a prognosticator for poor survival. Serum Reg IV concentration may predict CRC recurrence in the liver.
Our analysis of chromosomal aberrations in primary gastric cancers using comparative genomic hybridization has revealed novel, high and frequent copy number increases in the long arm of chromosome 20, indicating that this region contains novel amplified genes involved in gastric cancer progression. AIB1, a member of the steroid receptor co-activator-1 family, has been cloned on 20q12 as a candidate target gene for this amplification in human breast cancers. In this study, we examined the numbers of AIB1 copies as well as their expression and relation to clinico-pathological features in 72 primary gastric cancers. AIB1 amplification was observed in 7% and over-expression in 40% of the specimens. AIB1 amplification always coincided with its over-expression, but several cases showed AIB1 over-expression without amplification, suggesting that expression of AIB1 is regulated not only by gene amplification but also by other mechanisms, such as transcriptional activation, in human gastric cancer. Gastric cancers with AIB1 amplification showed extensive lymph node metastases, liver metastases and poorer prognosis compared to those without amplification. Our results suggest that amplification and over-expression of AIB1 are likely to increase the number of malignant phenotypes of gastric cancers and that it can be expected to be useful as a marker of poor prognosis.
Resistance to apoptosis plays an important role in tumors that are refractory to chemotherapy and ionizing radiation (IR). bax, which forms a heterodimer with bcl-2 and accelerates apoptosis, is not, or only weakly, expressed in most human breast cancer cells, and weak bax expression is considered to be related to the resistance of breast cancer cells to apoptosis. bax expression vector was introduced to human breast cancer MCF-7 cells, which exhibit weak expression of bax, to demonstrate its role of modulating radiation-induced apoptosis. bax overexpression in MCF-7 cells by stable transfection does not affect viability by itself, but each stable transfectant was more sensitive to IR than the parental MCF-7 cells. The degree of enhancement in radiosensitivity was dependent on the expression level of bax. IR upregulated p53 and p21WAF1 about 5- to 10-fold and downregulated bcl-2 and bcl-XL by 80-90% at 6 hr in both parent and bax stably transfected MCF-7 cells to the same degree. FACS analysis and DNA electrophoresis revealed that this sensitization was due to apoptosis. We suggest that exogenous bax expression might be one of the factors determining cellular radiosensitivity in MCF-7 breast cancer cells and may have therapeutic applications for enhancing radiation sensitivity in breast cancer cells.
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