3 resultados para Cervical esophageal stump

em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna


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Several studies have shown epidemiologic, clinical, immune-histochemical and molecular differences among esophageal adenocarcinomas (EAC). Since pathogenesis and biology of this tumor are far to be well defined, our study aimed to examine intra- and inter-tumor heterogeneity and to solve crucial controversies through different molecular approaches. Target sequencing was performed for sorted cancer subpopulations from formalin embedded material obtained from 38 EACs, not treated with neoadjuvant therapy. 35 out 38 cases carried at least one somatic mutation, not present in the corresponding sorted stromal cells. 73.7% of cases carried mutations in TP53 and 10.5% in CDKN2A. Mutations in other genes occurred at lower frequency, including HNF1A, not previously associated with EAC. Sorting allowed us to isolate clones with different mutational loads and/or additional copy number amplifications, confirming the high intra-tumor heterogeneity of these cancers. In our cohort TP53 gene abnormalities correlated with a better survival (P = 0.028); conversely, loss of SMAD4 protein expression was associated with a higher recurrence rate (P = 0.015). Shifting the focus on the epigenetic characterization of EAC, miR-221 and miR-483-3p resulted upregulated from the MicroRNA Array card analysis and confirmed with further testing. The up-regulation of both miRNAs correlated with clinical outcomes, in particular with a reduced cancer-specific survival (miR483-3p P=0.0293; miR221 P=0.0059). In vitro analyses demonstrated an increase for miR-483-3p (fold-change=2.7) that appear to be inversely correlated with SMAD4 expression in FLO-1 cell-line. In conclusion, selective sorting allowed to define the real mutation status and to isolate different cancer subclones. MiRNA expression analysis revealed a significant up-regulation of miR-221 and miR-483-3p, which correlated with worst prognosis, implying that they can be considered oncogenic factors in EAC. Therefore, cell sorting technologies, coupled with next generation sequencing, and the analysis of microRNA profiles seem to be promising strategies to guide treatment and help classify cancer prognosis.

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INTRODUCTION: Esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC) is a severe malignancy in terms of prognosis and mortality rate. Because its great genetic heterogeneity, disputes regarding classification, prevention and treatments are still unsolved. AIM: We investigated intra- and inter-EAC heterogeneity by defining EAC’s somatic mutational profile and the role of candidate microRNAs, to correlate the molecular profile of tumors to clinical outcomes and to identify biomarkers for classification. METHODS: 38 EAC cases were analyzed via high-throughput cell sorting technology combined with targeted sequencing and whole genome low-pass sequencing. Targeted sequencing of further 169 cases was performed to widen the study. miR221 and miR483-3p expression was profiled via qPCR in 112 EACs and correlation with clinical outcomes was investigated. RESULTS: 35/38 EACs carried at least one somatic mutation absent in stromal cells. TP53 was found mutated in 73.7% of cases. Selective sorting revealed tumor subclones with different mutational loads and copy number alterations, confirming the high intra-tumor heterogeneity of EAC. Mutations were in most cases at homozygous state, and we identified alterations that were missed with the whole-tumor analysis. Mutations in HNF1A gene, not previously associated with EAC, were identified in both cohorts. Higher expression of miR483-3p and miR221 was associated with poorer cancer specific survival (P=0.0293 and P=0.0059), and recurrence in the Lauren intestinal subtype (P=0.0459 and P=0.0002). Median expression levels of miRNAs were higher in patients with advanced tumor stages. The loss of SMAD4 immunoreactivity was significantly associated with poorer cancer specific survival and recurrence (P=0.0452; P=0.022 respectively). CONCLUSION: Combining selective sorting technology and next generation sequencing allowed to better define EAC inter- and intra-tumor heterogeneity. We identified HNF1A as a new mutated gene associated to EAC that could be involved in tumor progression and promising biomarkers such as SMAD4, miR221 and miR483-3p to identify patients at higher risk for more aggressive tumors.

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Esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC) is a severe cancer that has been on the rise in Western nations over the past few decades. It has a high mortality rate and the 5-year survival rate is only 35%–45%. EAC has been included in a group of tumors with one of the highest rates of copy number alterations (CNAs), somatic structural rearrangements, high mutation frequency, with different mutational signatures, and with epigenetic mechanisms. The vast heterogeneity of EAC mutations makes it challenging to comprehend the biology that underlies tumor onset and development, identify prognostic biomarkers, and define a molecular classification to stratify patients. The only way to resolve the current disagreements is through an exhaustive molecular analysis of EAC. We examined the genetic profile of 164 patients' esophageal adenocarcinoma samples (without chemo-radiotherapy). The included patients did not receive neoadjuvant therapies, which can change the genetic and molecular composition of the tumor. Using next-generation sequencing technologies (NGS) at high coverage, we examined a custom panel of 26 cancer-related genes. Over the entire cohort, 337 variants were found, with the TP53 gene showing the most frequent alteration (67.27%). Poorer cancer-specific survival was associated with missense mutations in the TP53 gene (Log Rank P=0.0197). We discovered HNF1alpha gene disruptive mutations in 7 cases that were also affected by other gene changes. We started to investigate its role in EAC cell lines by silencing HNF1alpha to mimic our EAC cohort and we use Seahorse technique to analyze its role in the metabolism in esophageal cell. No significant changes were found in transfected cell lines. We conclude by finding that a particular class of TP53 mutations (missense changes) adversely impacted cancer-specific survival in EAC. HNF1alpha, a new EAC-mutated gene, was found, but more research is required to fully understand its function as a tumor suppressor gene.