CD44 Expression in Clear Cell Renal Cell Carcinoma (ccRCC) Correlates with Tumor Grade and Patient Survival and Is Affected by Gene Methylation

Clear cell RCC (ccRCC) represents the most common type of kidney cancer, with surgery being the only potential curative treatment. Almost one-third of ccRCC patients relapse either locally or as cases of distant metastases. Several biomarkers have been employed in order to separate ccRCC patients wi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Genes 2024-04, Vol.15 (5), p.537
Hauptverfasser: Papanastasiou, Anastasios D, Peroukidis, Stavros, Sirinian, Chaido, Arkoumani, Elisavet, Chaniotis, Dimitrios, Zizi-Sermpetzoglou, Adamantia
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Clear cell RCC (ccRCC) represents the most common type of kidney cancer, with surgery being the only potential curative treatment. Almost one-third of ccRCC patients relapse either locally or as cases of distant metastases. Several biomarkers have been employed in order to separate ccRCC patients with better prognosis or to predict treatment outcomes, with limited results. CD44 is a membrane glycoprotein with multiple roles in normal development but also cancer. Recently, the CD44 standard isoform has been implicated in tumor progression and the metastasis cascade through microenvironment interactions. Here, through CD44 immunohistochemical staining of ccRCC patient samples and TCGA data analysis, we sought to elucidate the expression patterns (mRNA and protein) of CD44 in clear cell RCC and correlate its expression with clinicopathological parameters. We were able to show that CD44 expression presents a positive association with tumor grade and overall survival, predicting a worse patient outcome in ccRCC. In addition, our data indicate that the mRNA upregulation can be attributed to reduced gene methylation, implicating epigenetic gene regulation in ccRCC development and progression.
ISSN:2073-4425
2073-4425
DOI:10.3390/genes15050537