Heterogeneous ribonucleoprotein K is a marker of oral leukoplakia and correlates with poor prognosis of squamous cell carcinoma

Oral leukoplakia is a heterogeneous lesion with risk of cancer development; there are no biomarkers to predict its potential of malignant transformation. Tissue proteomic analysis of oral leukoplakia using iTRAQ labeling liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry showed overexpression of heterogeneous...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of cancer 2009-09, Vol.125 (6), p.1398-1406
Hauptverfasser: Matta, Ajay, Tripathi, Satyendra Chandra, DeSouza, Leroi V., Grigull, Jörg, Kaur, Jatinder, Chauhan, Shyam Singh, Srivastava, Anurag, Thakar, Alok, Shukla, Nootan Kumar, Duggal, Ritu, DattaGupta, Siddhartha, Ralhan, Ranju, Michael Siu, K.W.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Oral leukoplakia is a heterogeneous lesion with risk of cancer development; there are no biomarkers to predict its potential of malignant transformation. Tissue proteomic analysis of oral leukoplakia using iTRAQ labeling liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry showed overexpression of heterogeneous ribonucleoprotein K (hnRNP K), a transformation‐related RNA‐binding protein, in leukoplakia in comparison with normal tissue. Herein, we investigated the clinical significance of hnRNP K in identification of oral leukoplakic lesions in early stages and as a prognostic marker in head‐and‐neck/oral squamous cell carcinomas (HNOSCCs). Immunohistochemical analysis of hnRNP K was performed in 100 HNOSCCs, 199 leukoplakias and 55 nonmalignant tissues and correlated with clinicopathologic parameters and disease prognosis over 6 years for HNOSCCs. hnRNP K nuclear expression increased from normal tissues to leukoplakia, and frank malignancy (p < 0.001). Cytoplasmic hnRNP K increased significantly from leukoplakia to HNOSCCs (p < 0.001) and was associated with poor prognosis of HNOSCCs (p = 0.011) by Kaplan–Meier analysis. The most important finding of our follow‐up study is that cytoplasmic hnRNP K is an independent predictor of disease recurrence in HNOSCC patients. In conclusion, nuclear hnRNP K may serve as a potential marker for early diagnosis, whereas its cytoplasmic accumulation can help to identify a subgroup of HNOSCC patients with poor prognosis, suggesting its putative utility in clinical management of HNOSCC. © 2009 UICC
ISSN:0020-7136
1097-0215
DOI:10.1002/ijc.24517