These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.
Pubmed for Handhelds
PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS
Search MEDLINE/PubMed
Title: Validation of stem cell markers in clinical prostate cancer: α6-integrin is predictive for non-aggressive disease. Author: Hoogland AM, Verhoef EI, Roobol MJ, Schröder FH, Wildhagen MF, van der Kwast TH, Jenster G, van Leenders GJ. Journal: Prostate; 2014 May; 74(5):488-96. PubMed ID: 24375374. Abstract: BACKGROUND: Stem cells are postulated to mediate prostate cancer progression, and represent a small fraction of the entire tumor. Various proteins (α2-integrin, α6-integrin, CD117, CD133, EZH2, OCT3/4) are associated with a prostate cancer stem cell phenotype in cell lines and xenografts. Our objective was to investigate expression of stem cell markers in clinical prostate cancer in relation to outcome. METHODS: We validated immunohistochemical expression of stem cell markers in 481 prostate cancer patients and correlated expression with clinicopathologic parameters. RESULTS: Sporadic expression of α2-integrin was present in a fraction of tumor cells (<5%) in 94.7% of tumors and associated with PSA > 10 ng/ml (P = 0.04). α6-Integrin expression (<5%) occurred in 28.4% patients, while ≥5% α6-integrin expression was associated with PSA≤10 ng/ml (P = 0.01), Gleason score <7 (P < 0.01) and pT2-disease (P = 0.02). α6-integrin was predictive for biochemical recurrence (P < 0.01), local recurrence (P = 0.03) and disease specific death (P = 0.03). EZH2 expression was generally low with 2.6% of tumors showing ≥1% positive cells. EZH2 was associated with Gleason score ≥7 (P = 0.01) and biochemical recurrence (P = 0.01). We did not identify expression of CD117, CD133, and OCT3/4 in prostate cancer samples. CONCLUSIONS: Expression of α2-integrin and EZH2 in a small fraction of prostate cancer cells is supportive for their role as stem cell marker. Although α6-integrin was not a unique stem cell marker, it was predictive for prostate cancer biochemical and local recurrence, and disease specific death. The validity of CD117, CD133, and OCT3/4 as prostate cancer stem cell marker is questionable since these proteins were not expressed in clinical prostate cancer.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]