Molecular profiling of circulating tumor cells links plasticity to the metastatic process in endometrial cancer

Autor/a

Alonso-Alconada, Lorena

Muinelo-Romay, Laura

Madissoo, Kadri

Díaz-López, Antonio

Krakstad, Camilla

Trovik, Jone

Wik, Elisabeth

Hapangama, Dharani

Coenegrachts, Lieve

Cano, Amparo

Gil-Moreno, Antonio

Chiva, Luís

Cueva, Juan

Vieito, María

Ortega Izquierdo, Maria Eugenia

Mariscal, Javier

Colás, Eva

Castellví, Josep

Cusido, Maite

Dolcet Roca, Xavier

Nijman, Hans W.

Bosse, Tjalling

Green, John A.

Romano, Andrea

Reventós, Jaume

López-López, Rafael

Salvesen, Helga B.

Amant, Frederic

Matias-Guiu, Xavier

Moreno Bueno, Gema

Abal, Miguel

Fecha de publicación

2015-09-23T10:35:14Z

2015-09-23T10:35:14Z

2014



Resumen

Background: About 20% of patients diagnosed with endometrial cancer (EC) are considered high-risk with unfavorable prognosis. In the framework of the European Network for Individualized Treatment in EC (ENITEC), we investigated the presence and phenotypic features of Circulating Tumor Cells (CTC) in high-risk EC patients. Methods: CTC isolation was carried out in peripheral blood samples from 34 patients, ranging from Grade 3 Stage IB to Stage IV carcinomas and recurrences, and 27 healthy controls using two methodologies. Samples were subjected to EpCAM-based immunoisolation using the CELLection™ Epithelial Enrich kit (Invitrogen, Dynal) followed by RTqPCR analysis. The phenotypic determinants of endometrial CTC in terms of pathogenesis, hormone receptor pathways, stem cell markers and epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT) drivers were asked. Kruskal-Wallis analysis followed by Dunn’s post-test was used for comparisons between groups. Statistical significance was set at p < 0.05. Results: EpCAM-based immunoisolation positively detected CTC in high-risk endometrial cancer patients. CTC characterization indicated a remarkable plasticity phenotype defined by the expression of the EMT markers ETV5, NOTCH1, SNAI1, TGFB1, ZEB1 and ZEB2. In addition, the expression of ALDH and CD44 pointed to an association with stemness, while the expression of CTNNB1, STS, GDF15, RELA, RUNX1, BRAF and PIK3CA suggested potential therapeutic targets. We further recapitulated the EMT phenotype found in endometrial CTC through the up-regulation of ETV5 in an EC cell line, and validated in an animal model of systemic dissemination the propensity of these CTC in the accomplishment of metastasis. Conclusions: Our results associate the presence of CTC with high-risk EC. Gene-expression profiling characterized a CTC-plasticity phenotype with stemness and EMT features. We finally recapitulated this CTC-phenotype by over-expressing ETV5 in the EC cell line Hec1A and demonstrated an advantage in the promotion of metastasis in an in vivo mouse model of CTC dissemination and homing.


ISCIII PI11/00873; Fundación Asociación Española Contra el Cancer (AECC), Grupos Estables 2011; InveNNta (Innovation in Nanomedicine), co-financed by the European Union (EU) through the Operational Programme for Cross-border Cooperation, Spain-Portugal (POCTEP 2007-2013), European Regional Development Fund (ERDF); Helse Vest, Research Council of Norway, Norwegian Cancer Society and Harald Andersens legat (H.B.S.); L. Alonso-Alconada is recipient of fellowship from the Basque Government (Spain).

Tipo de documento

article
publishedVersion

Lengua

Inglés

Materias y palabras clave

High-risk endometrial carcinomas; Circulating tumor cells; Epithelial to mesenchymal transition; Endometri -- Càncer

Publicado por

Biomed Central

Documentos relacionados

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/MICINN//PI11%2F00873/ES/Caracterización del proceso de metástasis y diseño de nuevas estrategias terapéuticas en cáncer de endometrio: modelos in vitro/

Reproducció del document publicat a https://doi.org/10.1186/1476-4598-13-223

Molecular Cancer, 2014, vol. 13, núm. 223, p. 1-10

Derechos

cc-by (c) Alonso-Alconada, Lorena et al., 2014

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/

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