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ABSTRACT: Cytoreductive surgery and intraperitoneal (i.p.) chemotherapy constitute a curative treatment option in mucinous peritoneal surface malignancies of intestinal origin, but treatment outcome is highly variable and the search for novel therapies is warranted. Immunotoxins are attractive candidates for targeted therapy in the peritoneal cavity because of direct cytotoxicity, distinct mechanisms of action and tumor cell selectivity. The MOC31PE immunotoxin targets the tumor-associated adhesion protein EpCAM (Epithelial Cell Adhesion Molecule), and has been administered safely in early clinical trials. In the present work, the efficacy of i.p. administration of MOC31PE alone and together with mitomycin C (MMC) was investigated in unique animal models of human mucinous peritoneal surface malignancies. In initial model validation experiments, clear differences in efficacy were demonstrated between MMC and oxaliplatin, favoring MMC in five investigated tumor models. Subsequently, MOC31PE and MMC were given as single i.p. injections alone and in combination. In the PMCA-2 model, moderate growth inhibition was obtained with both drugs, while the combination resulted in at least additive effects; whereas the PMP-2 model was highly sensitive to both drugs separately and in combination and intermediate sensitivity was found for the PMCA-3 model. Furthermore, results from ex vivo experiments on freshly obtained mucinous tumor tissue from animals and patients suggested that classic mechanisms of immunotoxin activity were involved; i.e. inhibition of protein synthesis and induction of apoptosis. The present results suggest that adding MOC31PE to MMC-based i.p. chemotherapy should be further explored for EpCAM-expressing peritoneal surface malignancies, and a phase I trial is in preparation. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
International Journal of Cancer 03/2013; · 5.44 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The complexity of cancer and the vast amount of experimental data available have made computer-aided approaches necessary. Biomolecular modelling techniques are becoming increasingly easier to use, whereas hardware and software are becoming better and cheaper. Cross-talk between theoretical and experimental scientists dealing with cancer-research from a molecular approach, however, is still uncommon. This is in contrast to other fields, such as amyloid-related diseases, where molecular modellingstudies are widely acknowledged. The aim of this review paper is therefore to expose some of the more common approaches in molecular modelling to cancer scientists in simple terms, illustrating success stories while also revealing the limitations of computational studies at the molecular level.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 02/2013; · 4.66 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The cysteine protease legumain is involved in several biological and pathological processes, and the protease has been found over-expressed and associated with an invasive and metastatic phenotype in a number of solid tumors. Consequently, legumain has been proposed as a prognostic marker for certain cancers, and a potential therapeutic target. Nevertheless, details on how legumain advances malignant progression along with regulation of its proteolytic activity are unclear. In the present work, legumain expression was examined in colorectal cancer cell lines. Substantial differences in amounts of pro- and active legumain forms, along with distinct intracellular distribution patterns, were observed in HCT116 and SW620 cells and corresponding subcutaneous xenografts. Legumain is thought to be located and processed towards its active form primarily in the endo-lysosomes; however, the subcellular distribution remains largely unexplored. By analyzing subcellular fractions, a proteolytically active form of legumain was found in the nucleus of both cell lines, in addition to the canonical endo-lysosomal residency. In situ analyses of legumain expression and activity confirmed the endo-lysosomal and nuclear localizations in cultured cells and, importantly, also in sections from xenografts and biopsies from colorectal cancer patients. In the HCT116 and SW620 cell lines nuclear legumain was found to make up approximately 13% and 17% of the total legumain, respectively. In similarity with previous studies on nuclear variants of related cysteine proteases, legumain was shown to process histone H3.1. The discovery of nuclear localized legumain launches an entirely novel arena of legumain biology and functions in cancer.
PLoS ONE 01/2013; 8(1):e52980. · 4.09 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: MicroRNAs (miRNAs) regulate gene expression by binding to mRNA, and can function as oncogenes or tumor suppressors depending on the target. In this study, using qRT-PCR, we examined the expression of six miRNAs (miR-21, miR-31, miR-92a, miR-101, miR-106a and miR-145) in tumors from 193 prospectively recruited patients with colorectal cancer, and associations with clinicopathological parameters and patient outcome were analyzed. The miRNAs were chosen based on previous studies for their biomarker potential and suggested biological relevance in colorectal cancer. METHODS: The miRNA expression was examined by qRT-PCR. Associations between miRNA expression and clinicopathological variables were explored using Mann--Whitney U and Kruskal-Wallis test while survival was estimated using the Kaplan-Meier method and compared using the log-rank test. RESULTS: MiR-101 was hardly expressed in the tumor samples, while for the other miRNAs, variable expression levels and expression ranges were observed, with miR-21 being most abundantly expressed relative to the reference (RNU44). In our study cohort, major clinical significance was demonstrated only for miR-31, as high expression was associated with advanced tumor stage and poor differentiation. No significant associations were found between expression of the investigated miRNAs and metastasis-free or overall survival. CONCLUSIONS: Investigating the expression of six miRNAs previously identified as candidate biomarkers in colorectal cancer, few clinically relevant associations were detected in our patient cohort. Our results emphasize the importance of validating potential tumor markers in independent patient cohorts, and indicate that the role of miRNAs as colorectal cancer biomarkers is still undetermined.
BMC Cancer 11/2012; 12(1):505. · 3.01 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: The histone deacetylase inhibitor vorinostat is a candidate radiosensitizer in locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC). Radiosensitivity is critically influenced by hypoxia; hence, it is important to evaluate the efficacy of potential radiosensitizers under variable tissue oxygenation. Since fluoropyrimidine-based chemoradiotherapy (CRT) is the only clinically validated regimen in LARC, efficacy in combination with this established regimen should be assessed in preclinical models before a candidate drug enters clinical trials. METHODS: Radiosensitization by vorinostat under hypoxia was studied in four colorectal carcinoma cell lines and in one colorectal carcinoma xenograft model by analysis of clonogenic survival and tumor growth delay, respectively. Radiosensitizing effects of vorinostat in combination with capecitabine were assessed by evaluation of tumor growth delay in two colorectal carcinoma xenografts models. RESULTS: Under hypoxia, radiosensitization by vorinostat was demonstrated in vitro in terms of decreased clonogenicity and in vivo as inhibition of tumor growth. Adding vorinostat to capecitabine-based CRT increased radiosensitivity of xenografts in terms of inhibited tumor growth. CONCLUSIONS: Vorinostat sensitized colorectal carcinoma cells to radiation under hypoxia in vitro and in vivo and improved therapeutic efficacy in combination with capecitabine-based CRT in vivo. The results encourage implementation of vorinostat into CRT in LARC trials.
Radiation Oncology 09/2012; 7(1):165. · 2.32 Impact Factor
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Tumor Biology 05/2012; 33(4):1263-4. · 1.94 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: In colorectal cancer there is a need for molecular markers that can complement the histopathological staging in predicting the likelihood of disease recurrence following curatively intended surgery. B7-H3 is an immunoregulatory protein shown to be overexpressed in several cancer forms, often associated with more advanced disease and poor prognosis. We wanted to examine whether B7-H3 could be a potential prognostic marker in colorectal cancer. Paraffin-embedded samples from 277 colorectal cancer patients were immunostained with anti-B7-H3 antibody. B7-H3 was expressed in the tumor cell cytoplasm and cell membrane in 62% and 46% of the samples, respectively. Unexpectedly, B7-H3 was expressed in the nucleus in 30% of the tumors. The nuclear localization was confirmed by Western immunoblotting of subcellular fractions. Importantly, in colon cancer, nuclear B7-H3 expression was independently and significantly associated with reduced metastasis-free, disease-specific and overall survival. B7-H3 expression in tumor-associated vasculature and fibroblasts was observed in the majority of samples, and endothelial B7-H3 expression was also significantly associated with poor outcome in colon cancer. In rectal cancer patients, the only significant association was between fibroblast B7-H3 expression and shorter metastasis-free survival. Few significant associations to clinicopathological parameters were seen. The results indicate that nuclear B7-H3 might be involved in colon cancer progression and metastasis, and suggest that nuclear B7-H3 could become a useful prognostic marker in colon cancer.
International Journal of Cancer 04/2012; 131(11):2528-36. · 5.44 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) is still the only routinely used biomarker in colorectal cancer (CRC), but its utility is hampered by poor specificity and sensitivity, and the search for novel biomarkers is highly warranted. The nonspecific cross-reacting antigen 2 (NCA-2), a truncated CEA species molecule which is transcribed from the same gene, has been suggested as an alternative biomarker to CEA. In the present work, specific immunofluorometric assays were used for detection of NCA-2 and full-length CEA in bone marrow plasma from 277 CRC patients to assess their value as prognostic biomarkers, and detection was also performed in tumor tissue and a CRC cell line. Elevated plasma CEA was associated with advanced tumor stage at diagnosis and adverse patient outcome, while for NCA-2, although the same trends were observed, no additional prognostic information was gained. While specific detection of NCA-2 was clearly achieved in plasma samples, cross-reactivity with full-length CEA was observed when the antigen was exposed to common fixation chemicals. The results from this study indicate that NCA-2 is probably not a prognostic biomarker in CRC and, furthermore, underline the issue of antibody specificity when investigating CEA species molecules.
Tumor Biology 02/2012; 33(1):73-83. · 1.94 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Rab25, an epithelial-specific member of the Rab family of small GTPases, was previously shown to be overexpressed in ovarian/primary peritoneal serous carcinoma compared to malignant mesothelioma using gene expression arrays. The objective of this study was to validate this finding at the mRNA and protein level. Quantitative PCR analysis of 112 Müllerian serous carcinomas (84 effusions, 28 primary ovarian carcinomas) and 22 malignant mesotheliomas (19 effusions, 3 solid specimens) showed significantly higher RAB25 mRNA expression in the former tumor (p < 0.001). Immunohistochemical analysis of Rab25 protein expression in 245 effusions showed significantly higher expression of this protein in Müllerian serous carcinoma compared to malignant mesothelioma (189/209 vs. 12/36 positive tumors, respectively; p < 0.001). Immunostaining of 101 patient-matched solid Müllerian carcinoma specimens (34 primary carcinomas, 67 metastases) showed expression levels comparable to effusions (94/101 positive specimens; p > 0.05). Rab25 mRNA and protein expression levels in Müllerian carcinoma effusions did not correlate with overall or progression-free survival. Our data confirm that Rab25 effectively differentiates Müllerian carcinomas from malignant mesothelioma at the mRNA and protein level, suggesting a role in the diagnostic work-up of serosal cancers.
Archiv für Pathologische Anatomie und Physiologie und für Klinische Medicin 01/2012; 460(2):193-202. · 2.49 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Recognizing EGFR as key orchestrator of the metastatic process in colorectal cancer, but also the substantial heterogeneity of responses to anti-EGFR therapy, we examined the pattern of composite tumor kinase activities governed by EGFR-mediated signaling that might be implicated in development of metastatic disease.
Point mutations in KRAS, BRAF, and PIK3CA and ERBB2 amplification were determined in primary tumors from 63 patients with locally advanced rectal cancer scheduled for radical treatment. Using peptide arrays with tyrosine kinase substrates, ex vivo phosphopeptide profiles were generated from the same baseline tumor samples and correlated to metastasis-free survival.
Unsupervised clustering analysis of the resulting phosphorylation of 102 array substrates defined two tumor classes, both consisting of cases with and without KRAS/BRAF mutations. The smaller cluster group of patients, with tumors generating high ex vivo phosphorylation of phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase-related substrates, had a particularly aggressive disease course, with almost a half of patients developing metastatic disease within one year of follow-up.
High phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase-mediated signaling activity of the primary tumor, rather than KRAS/BRAF mutation status, was identified as a hallmark of poor metastasis-free survival in patients with locally advanced rectal cancer undergoing radical treatment of the pelvic cavity.
PLoS ONE 01/2012; 7(11):e50806. · 4.09 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Tumor hypoxia is a common determinant of resistance to cytotoxic therapies and metastatic behavior. In rectal cancer patients receiving preoperative chemoradiotherapy, tyrosine kinase activities in tumors with poor and good treatment responses were found to differ. Given that tyrosine kinase signaling mediates hypoxic tissue adaptation, the present study examined whether tumor kinase activity might also correlate with systemic dissemination of rectal cancer. Immunomagnetic selection of disseminated tumor cells (DTC) from bone marrow aspirates was undertaken in 55 patients with locally advanced rectal cancer. Using peptide arrays with 144 tyrosine kinase substrates, phosphopeptide signatures were generated from patients' baseline tumor biopsies, to study association between DTC and tumor tyrosine kinase activity regulated ex vivo by sunitinib. Disseminated tumor cells were detected in 60% of cases, and these patients had significantly poorer metastasis-free survival than patients without DTC. Phosphorylation of 31 array tyrosine kinase substrates by tumor samples was significantly more strongly inhibited by sunitinib in the DTC-negative patients, with a number of phosphosubstrates representing angiogenic factors. In this cohort of rectal cancer patients, tumor phenotypes defined by a subset of tyrosine kinase activities correlating with weak ex vivo inhibition by sunitinib, was associated with early systemic dissemination.
Angiogenesis 08/2011; 14(4):481-9. · 6.06 Impact Factor
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Elisabeth Paus,
Mads Haugland Haugen,
Kari Hauge Olsen, Kjersti Flatmark,
Gunhild Mari Maelandsmo,
Olle Nilsson,
Eva Röijer,
Maria Lundin,
Christian Fermér,
Maria Samsonova,
Yuri Lebedin,
Torgny Stigbrand
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ABSTRACT: Fourteen monoclonal antibodies with specificity against native or recombinant antigens within the S100 family were investigated with regard to immunoreactivity. The specificities of the antibodies were studied using ELISA tests, Western blotting epitope mapping using competitive assays, and QCM technology. The mimotopes of antibodies against S100A4 were determined by random peptide phage display libraries. Antibody specificity was also tested by IHC and pair combinations evaluated for construction of immunoradiometric assays for S100B. Out of the 14 antibodies included in this report eight demonstrated specificity to S100B, namely MAbs 4E3, 4D2, S23, S53, 6G1, S21, S36, and 8B10. This reactivity could be classified into four different epitope groups using competing studies. Several of these MAbs did display minor reactivity to other S100 proteins when they were presented in denatured form. Only one of the antibodies, MAb 3B10, displayed preferential reactivity to S100A1; however, it also showed partial cross-reactivity with S100A10 and S100A13. Three antibodies, MAbs 20.1, 22.3, and S195, were specific for recombinant S100A4 in solution. Western blot revealed that MAb 20.1 and 22.3 recognized linear epitopes of S100A4, while MAb S195 reacted with a conformational dependent epitope. Surprisingly, MAb 14B3 did not demonstrate any reactivity to the panel of antigens used in this study.
Tumor Biology 02/2011; 32(1):1-12. · 1.94 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: In early-phase studies with targeted therapeutics and radiotherapy, it may be difficult to decide whether an adverse event should be considered a dose-limiting toxicity (DLT) of the investigational systemic agent, as acute normal tissue toxicity is frequently encountered with radiation alone. We have reanalyzed the toxicity data from a recently conducted phase 1 study on vorinostat, a histone deacetylase inhibitor, in combination with pelvic palliative radiotherapy, with emphasis on the dose distribution within the irradiated bowel volume to the development of DLT.
Of 14 eligible patients, three individuals experienced Common Terminology Criteria of Adverse Events grade 3 gastrointestinal and related toxicities, representing a toxicity profile vorinostat has in common with radiotherapy to pelvic target volumes. For each study patient, the relative volumes of small bowel receiving radiation doses between 6 Gy and 30 Gy at 6-Gy intervals (V6-V30) were determined from the treatment-planning computed tomography scans. The single patient that experienced a DLT at the second highest dose level of vorinostat, which was determined as the maximum-tolerated dose, had V6-V30 dose-volume estimates that were considerably higher than any other study patient. This patient may have experienced an adverse radiation dose-volume effect rather than a toxic effect of the investigational drug.
When reporting early-phase trial results on the tolerability of a systemic targeted therapeutic used as potential radiosensitizing agent, radiation dose-volume effects should be quantified to enable full interpretation of the study toxicity profile.
Radiation Oncology 01/2011; 6:33. · 2.32 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Current staging classifications in colorectal cancer are not able to accurately predict patient outcome, and the need for novel prognostic markers is evident. S100A4 is a Ca(2+)-binding protein which promotes metastasis in several tumour types, and the aim of the present study was to investigate the prognostic impact of S100A4 expression in colorectal cancer. Two hundred and forty two patients with curatively resected adenocarcinoma of the colon or rectum were prospectively included in the study at the time of surgery. S100A4 expression was analysed by immunohistochemistry, and associations with clinicopathological variables and patient outcome were investigated. Nuclear expression of S100A4 was observed in 29% and cytoplasmic expression was observed in 64% of the tumours. In univariate analysis, nuclear S100A4 was a negative predictor of metastasis-free (P=0.006) and overall survival (P=0.01), whereas cytoplasmic S100A4 was not associated with patient outcome. In multivariate analysis, nuclear localisation was inversely associated with metastasis-free (P=0.03) and overall survival (P=0.02). Interestingly, the prognostic impact was largely confined to TNM stage II, and stage II patients with tumours expressing nuclear S100A4 had a similar prognosis as stage III patients. In conclusion, nuclear expression of S100A4 is a novel prognostic marker in colorectal cancer, and the prognostic value in TNM stage II suggests that nuclear S100A4 could be used in the stratification of stage II patients for adjuvant treatment.
European journal of cancer (Oxford, England: 1990) 11/2010; 46(16):2919-25. · 4.12 Impact Factor
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Journal of Clinical Oncology 10/2010; 28(29):e577-8; author reply e581-3. · 18.37 Impact Factor
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Sigurd Folkvord, Kjersti Flatmark,
Svein Dueland,
Rik de Wijn,
Krystyna Kotanska Grøholt,
Knut H Hole,
Jahn M Nesland,
Rob Ruijtenbeek,
Piet J Boender,
Marianne Johansen,
Karl-Erik Giercksky,
Anne Hansen Ree
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ABSTRACT: Tumor response of rectal cancer to preoperative chemoradiotherapy (CRT) varies considerably. In experimental tumor models and clinical radiotherapy, activity of particular subsets of kinase signaling pathways seems to predict radiation response. This study aimed to determine whether tumor kinase activity profiles might predict tumor response to preoperative CRT in locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC).
Sixty-seven LARC patients were treated with a CRT regimen consisting of radiotherapy, fluorouracil, and, where possible, oxaliplatin. Pretreatment tumor biopsy specimens were analyzed using microarrays with kinase substrates, and the resulting substrate phosphorylation patterns were correlated with tumor response to preoperative treatment as assessed by histomorphologic tumor regression grade (TRG). A predictive model for TRG scores from phosphosubstrate signatures was obtained by partial-least-squares discriminant analysis. Prediction performance was evaluated by leave-one-out cross-validation and use of an independent test set.
In the patient population, 73% and 15% were scored as good responders (TRG 1-2) or intermediate responders (TRG 3), whereas 12% were assessed as poor responders (TRG 4-5). In a subset of 7 poor responders and 12 good responders, treatment outcome was correctly predicted for 95%. Application of the prediction model on the remaining patient samples resulted in correct prediction for 85%. Phosphosubstrate signatures generated by poor-responding tumors indicated high kinase activity, which was inhibited by the kinase inhibitor sunitinib, and several discriminating phosphosubstrates represented proteins derived from signaling pathways implicated in radioresistance.
Multiplex kinase activity profiling may identify functional biomarkers predictive of tumor response to preoperative CRT in LARC.
International journal of radiation oncology, biology, physics 10/2010; 78(2):555-62. · 4.59 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Colorectal cancer is a leading cause of cancer-related morbidity and mortality in the Western world. While improved diagnostic surveillance and treatment strategies involving surgery, chemo-, and radiotherapy have all contributed to earlier detection and improved survival, treatment decisions are still made almost exclusively based on the cancer's clinicopathological stage at diagnosis. Therefore, the search for new biomarkers to facilitate early diagnosis and individualized treatment is particularly warranted. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are short, noncoding RNAs that regulate gene expression through posttranscriptional interactions with mRNA, thereby potentially leading to a vast range of downstream effects that depend on the target proteins affected. The discovery that miRNAs may act as either oncogenes or tumor suppressors has initiated extensive research in the cancer field, leading to the identification of numerous miRNAs implicated in carcinogenesis and tumor progression. MiRNAs are chemically stable and can thus be detected in a broad range of clinical samples, making these molecules particularly attractive as potential biomarkers in cancer. While the knowledge of miRNA involvement in colorectal cancer biology is less extensive than for other cancer types and several targets with potential biological and clinical relevance have been identified, a significant amount of research is still needed. In this review, we explore the literature regarding the relevance of miRNAs in colorectal cancer, focusing in particular on miRNAs as potential diagnostic, prognostic, and predictive biomarkers.
American Journal Of Pathology 10/2010; 177(4):1592-9. · 4.89 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors have shown radiosensitising activity in preclinical tumour models. This phase 1 study assessed the use of vorinostat combined with pelvic palliative radiotherapy for gastrointestinal carcinoma.
Between Feb 14, 2007, and May 18, 2009, eligible patients with histologically confirmed carcinoma, scheduled to receive pelvic palliative radiation to 30 Gy in 3 Gy daily fractions over 2 weeks, were enrolled into cohorts of escalating vorinostat dose. Vorinostat was administered orally once daily, 3 h before each radiotherapy fraction, at the following dose levels: 100 mg (n=1), 200 mg (n=4), 300 mg (n=6), and 400 mg (n=6). Endpoints included safety, tolerability, and biological activity (tumour histone acetylation). This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00455351.
One patient withdrew consent after one treatment day, leaving 16 patients evaluable for tolerability. Most recorded adverse events were grade 1 and 2, among which fatigue (all patients) and gastrointestinal events (all patients) were most common. Grade 3 adverse events included fatigue (n=5), anorexia (n=3), diarrhoea (n=2), hyponatraemia (n=1), hypokalaemia (n=1), and acneiform rash (n=1). Of these, treatment-related grade 3 events (ie, dose-limiting toxicities) were observed in one of six patients at vorinostat 300 mg once daily (fatigue and anorexia), and in two of six patients at vorinostat 400 mg once daily (two events of diarrhoea and one each of fatigue, anorexia, hyponatraemia, and hypokalaemia). The maximum-tolerated dose of vorinostat in combination with palliative radiotherapy was thus determined to be 300 mg once daily. Histone hyperacetylation was detected, indicating biological activity of vorinostat.
Vorinostat can be safely combined with short-term pelvic palliative radiotherapy. This study highlights the potential use of HDAC inhibitors with radiation, and suggests investigation of vorinostat in long-term curative pelvic radiotherapy--eg, as a component of preoperative chemoradiotherapy for rectal cancer.
Merck & Co, Inc, Norwegian Cancer Society, Norwegian Health and Rehabilitation Foundation.
The lancet oncology 04/2010; 11(5):459-64. · 14.47 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Peritoneal surface malignancies are characterized by the propensity for tumor growth on peritoneal surfaces without development of extraperitoneal metastases, but the molecular basis for this phenomenon is incompletely understood. Five human tumors and corresponding orthotopic animal models of human pseudomyxoma peritonei and peritoneal mucinous carcinomatosis from colorectal carcinoma were extensively characterized by immunohistochemical analysis of molecular markers of tissue differentiation (carcinoembryonal antigen, CK20, CK7, and vimentin), proliferation and metastasis (Ki-67, vascular endothelial growth factor, and S100A4), mucins (MUC1, MUC2, MUC4, MUC5AC), and adhesion molecules (E-cadherin, N-cadherin, P-cadherin, claudin 1, claudin 3, and claudin 4). Macro- and microscopic growth patterns of implanted human tissues were preserved through passages in the animals, as were with few exception immunohistochemical staining profiles, supporting the relevance of the models as tools for studying the human disease. Tissue differentiation marker expression was in accordance with previously published results and high Ki-67 score confirmed high proliferative capacity, whereas absence of metastatic capacity was supported by low expression levels of the studied metastasis markers. These mucinous tumors expressed high levels of MUC2 and MUC4, whereas MUC1 was not expressed and MUC5AC expression was variable. Similarly, specific adhesion molecules from the cadherin and claudin families were shown to be of relevance in the investigated samples. The results indicate that mucinous peritoneal surface malignancies of intestinal origin are characterized by the presence of specific molecular markers and represent a step toward understanding the complexity of this intriguing phenotypic entity.
Human pathology 03/2010; 41(8):1109-19. · 3.03 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Nuclear localization of the metastasis-associated protein S100A4 has been shown to correlate with advanced disease stage in primary colorectal carcinomas (CRC), but nuclear function and its relevance for the metastatic capacity of tumor cells is still unclear. Among several nuclear interacting protein partners suggested for S100A4, the tumor suppressor protein p53 has attracted particular interest, and previous studies suggest direct and indirect modes of interaction between the two proteins. The present study was undertaken to assess coexpression and potential interaction in CRC. TP53 mutational status and S100A4 expression were investigated in a selected series of primary CRC specimens (n = 40) and cell lines (n = 17) using DNA sequencing, western blot, and double immunostaining. Additionally, S100A4 and p53 were experimentally up- and down-regulated in vitro to assess reciprocal effects. For the first time, S100A4 and p53 coexpression was demonstrated in individual CRC cells, with nuclear colocalization as a particularly interesting feature. In contrast to previous studies, no correlation was observed between TP53 mutational status and S100A4 expression, and no evidence was obtained to support reciprocal regulation between the two molecules in the HCT116 isogenic cell line model. In conclusion, S100A4 and p53 were shown to be colocalized in individual nuclei of CRC cells, and it might be speculated whether the proteins interact in this subcellular compartment.
Amino Acids 02/2010; 41(4):875-84. · 3.25 Impact Factor