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Indian Association for Cancer Research NEWSLETTER Volume 26 - Issue 2 November - 2010 CONTENTS : Lead Articles: 1. Recent development in cancer diagnosis - Dr. Hafiz Ahmed 2. Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition in Cancer -Dr. Sharmila Bapat Activities: 3. Cancer News 4. Spotlight on ………. EDITORIAL BOARD Editor : DR. PRABHUDAS PATEL Head, Biochemistry Research Division, The Gujarat Cancer & Research Institute, Ahmedabad-380 016 E-mail : [email protected] Members : DR. SHILIN SHUKLA (Ahmedabad) DR. RAKESH RAWAL (Ahmedabad) DR. BHUDEV DAS (Noida) DR. M. RADHAKRISHNA PILLAI (Thiruvananthapuram) DR. NISHIGANDHA NAIK (Navi Mumbai) DR. NEETA SINGH (New Delhi) DR. SUDHIR KRISHNA (Bangalore) DR. BHARAT AGGARWAL (USA) DR. NEWELL JOHNSON (Australia) IACR EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE 2009-12 President Vice-President Secretary Joint-Secretary Treasurer Members Dr. Rita Mulherkar Dr. Nishigandha Naik Dr. Tanuja Teni Dr. Sorab Dalal Dr. Asha Ramchandani Dr. Arun Kumar Dr. Sharmila Bapat Dr. R. I. Dave Dr. Dinesh Gupta Dr. H. N. Jayaram Dr. Surya B. Prasad Dr. Ajit Saxena Navi Mumbai Mumbai Navi Mumbai Navi Mumbai Navi Mumbai Bangalore Pune Ahmedabad New Delhi Indianapolis, USA Shillong Jammu-Tawi Indian Association for Cancer Research NEWSLETTER 01 1 From the Editor's Desk ……. Greetings ! It gives me enormous pleasure to bring out another issue of IACR newsletter. This issue of the newsletter contains two articles by eminent and distinguished scientists. One is review article by Dr.Hafiz Ahmed on “Recent development in cancer diagnosis”. As we are aware that cancer is a leading cause of death worldwide and the diagnosis of cancer relies primarily on invasive tissue biopsy, as noninvasive diagnostic tests are generally insufficient to define a disease process of cancer. The conventional histopathology based on light microscopy, however, has recently been complemented with ultrastructure, immuno-histochemistry and molecular diagnostics. In the past several years, there has been increasing interest and enthusiasm in molecular biology as tools for cancer early detection, diagnosis, prognosis and treatment. Molecular medicine has led to the discovery and application of molecular tumor markers, which make histology more accurate and additionally help to prognosticate cancer and has raised new possibilities in the diagnosis and treatment of human cancers. Recent advances in high-throughput technologies in genomics, proteomics, and metabolomics have facilitated in this. In this review, Dr. Hafiz Ahmed has given an overview of how the use of these technologies can aid in biomarker discovery, including DNA/RNA, protein, and metabolites, which provide information on the occurrence and progression of the disease. As more potential biomarkers are discovered, further studies are needed to validate these markers. The ultimate use of these biomarkers should be in clinical applications for cancer detection and treatment. The other article is on “Epithelial Mesenchymal Transition in Cancer” by Dr. Sharmila Bapat. Epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) is critical for appropriate embryonic development, and this process is re-engaged in adults during wound healing, tissue regeneration, organ fibrosis, and cancer progression. Dr. Bapat has brilliantly summarized recent novel insights into the molecular processes and players underlying EMT as well as molecular mechanisms of EMT and its involvement in cancer progression. I sincerely hope that these articles will be useful and add up to the knowledge of young scientists. In the spotlight section, we have highlighted the contribution of Dr. Pier Paolo Pandolfi, recipient of the Pezcoller Foundation-AACR International Award for Cancer Research -2011. It has been a great pleasure and experience to bring out IACR newsletter as the editor since March, 2007, which I have always enjoyed. However, the change is the demand of time for improvement and progress of any activity so that new innovative ideas and thoughts can come up and put in a new way. Taking this as a thought, I would like to request other senior IACR members to bring out IACR newsletter from next issue i.e. from March, 2011. I take the opportunity to pay my sincere thanks to the executive committee of IACR and IACR members for their cooperation and support which has been significantly useful in carrying out the IACR newsletter activity. I am also thankful to Ms. Ragini Singh for her help in bringing out IACR newsletter during 2007-10. My best wishes to IACR family members. Prabhudas S. Patel Editor, IACR Newsletter Volume 26 - Issue 2 November - 2010 02 NEWSLETTER Indian Association for Cancer Research Recent development in cancer diagnosis Hafiz Ahmed Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Maryland School of Medicine & Greenebaum Cancer Center, 701 East Pratt Street, Baltimore, Maryland, USA, [email protected] Cancer is the leading cause of death worldwide (1). There are an estimated 12 million new cancer diagnoses and more than 7 million deaths worldwide in the year 2010 (1). It is estimated that new cancer diagnoses will double by 2020 and nearly triple by 2030 (1). However, cancer death can be reduced or prevented if detected at their early stages. Conventional histopathology, immunohistochemistry or image based screening tools such as mammography for breast cancer and chest Xray for lung cancer may render specific detection of cancer, but may not be sensitive enough for early detection of the disease. Moreover, some of these tools are invasive and therefore, it is imperative to develop noninvasive techniques that distinguish between patients with and without cancer, as well as between stages of cancer. The introduction of advanced sophisticated technologies like proteomics (2), mass spectrometry, microarray (mRNA, micro RNA [3], protein, lectin, glycan [4]), automated DNA sequencing, comparative genomic hybridization, and epigenetics (DNA methylation) have allowed to search for new cancer biomarkers that may be useful for noninvasive (or minimally invasive) early detection from biological fluids such as serum, urine, sputum as well as fluid-derived exosomes (5) and circulating tumor cells (6) and thereby prevention of the disease. Proteomics allows both qualitative and quantitative assessment of changes in protein expression related to specific cellular responses. After two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (2DE), protein spots on the gel are detected robotically and their sequences analyzed by tandem mass spectrometric methods. Recently, quantitative proteomics coupled with metabolic or post-extraction stable-isotope labeling alone, or in combination with affinity tags allows rapid advancements in global detection and quantitation of proteins important for not only biomarker discovery, but also cell function and disease mechanism (2). Many protein markers for various cancers such as NMP22 (bladder cancer), CEA (colorectal cancer), CA15-3 and Volume 26 - Issue 2 November - 2010 Her2/Neu (breast cancer), alpha-fetoprotein (liver cancer), CA-19-9 (pancreatic cancer), and CA-125 (ovarian cancer) have been identified using proteomics (2). The alteration in protein glycosylation on the cell surface and in body fluids such as serum has been shown to correlate with the progression of cancer. Thus, a high-throughput technique for quantitative analysis of glycan structure on glycoproteins may be useful for identifying new glycoprotein biomarkers suitable for early cancer detection. Moreover, since lectins can specifically and reversibly bind glycans with different structural moieties, they serve as excellent tools in screening glycosylation differences between various samples. The fucosylated haptoglobin has recently been identified as a marker for pancreatic cancer using this approach (4). Gene expression profiling or microarray analysis has been now a standard technique which enabled the measurement of thousands of genes in a single RNA sample (7). Although a variety of microarray platforms have been developed over the years to accomplish this, but the basic principle is that a glass slide or membrane is spotted or "arrayed" with DNA fragments or oligonucleotides that represent specific gene coding regions. Fluorescently labeled (usually Cy3 or Cy5) purified RNA from tumor specimen is then hybridized to the oligonucleotide array. Reference RNA such as from normal tissue is labeled with a dye different from the tumor specimen and hybridized also simultaneously to the array to facilitate comparison of data across multiple experiments. APRIL/TNFSF13 (a TNF superfamily ligand) has recently been identified as a novel clinical chemo-resistance biomarker in colorectal adenocarcinoma by this approach (8). microRNAs (miRNAs) are post-transcriptional regulators that suppress the translation of target mRNAs by binding to their 3′ untranslated region Indian Association for Cancer Research NEWSLETTER 03 Fig. 1 Simplified figure showing gene transcription by unmethylated promoter and gene silencing by the methylated promoter. In normal cells, promoter of some genes such as tumor suppressor protein, DNA repair proteins is unmethylated and accessible to binding to the transcription factors (TF) allowing transcription. But, in many cancers these genes are methylated by DNA methyltransferase 1 and therefore bound by the methyl-CpG binding proteins (MBD) and histone deacetylase (HDAC). Thus the methylated promoter is not accessible to binding to the transcription factors and inactive. In tumor tissues and biological fluids such as serum and urine, the methylated DNA is measured by various methods for the development of diagnostic and prognostic tools for the cancer. HAT indicates histone acetyltransferase; RNA pol II, RNA polymerase II; and HMT, histone methyltransferase; during various cellular processes, such as proliferation, differentiation, and cell death. miRNAs are an ideal class of blood-based biomarkers for cancer detection because their expression is frequently dysregulated in cancer and their expression patterns in human cancer appear to be tissue-specific. The miRNA miR-141 has been identified as a marker for prostate cancer (6). Comparative genomic hybridization allows detection of chromosomal gains and losses in genomic complement (9). Identification of the structurally aberrant cancer gene has become essential, as many mutations are not discernible at the cytogenetic level. Several diagnostic molecular markers such as K ras mutation (colon cancer) (10) and p53 mutation (bladder cancer, head and neck cancer) (11) have been identified by this method. A recently described gene fusion between TMPRSS2 and ETS family genes in prostate cancer may have clinical applications in diagnosis, prognosis and therapy (12). The detection of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) may Volume 26 - Issue 2 November - 2010 04 NEWSLETTER represent an early indication of micro-metastasis or aggressive tumors which are able to shed tumor cells into the blood (13). The CTCs are captured using antibody labeled magnetic beads and characterized for gene expression analysis by RT-PCR. The detection of CTCs is being used as a prognostic test in patients with metastatic cancers of the breast, prostate and colon. The exacerbated release of 40-100 nm membrane vesicles (called exosomes) in tumor cells, suggests an important role of exosomes in diagnosis and biomarker studies (14). They are found in vivo in body fluids such as blood, urine, amniotic fluid, malignant ascites, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, synovial fluid, and breast milk. Exosomes contain mRNA, microRNA (miRNA), protein/glycoprotein, and lipid/glycolipid. In addition to a common set of membrane and cytosolic molecules, exosomes harbor distinct subsets of molecules linked to cell type-associated functions. Prostate cancer derived urine exosomes are shown to contain two known prostate cancer biomarkers, PCA-3 and TMPRSS2: ERG, showing the potential for diagnosis and monitoring cancer patient's status (15). Recently, miRNA profiling (such as miR-21, miR-141, miR-200a, miR-200c, miR-200b, miR-203, miR-205 and miR-214) of circulating tumor exosomes has been used as surrogate diagnostic markers for ovarian cancer (16). Epigenetic alterations, including hypermethylation of CpG islands in the gene promoters are believed to be early events in neoplastic progression (17). Hypermethylation of tumor suppressor gene promoters contributes to their silencing during the neoplastic process (17, Fig. 1). Thus, methylated gene promoters can serve as markers for the detection of cancer from clinical specimens such as tissue biopsies or body fluids (18). DNA is stable and its modifications can be reliably detected both qualitatively and quantitatively by PCR-based techniques. PCR also allows detection of as few as one cancer cell (or genome copy) in a background of thousands of normal cells, thereby permitting detection of a cancer before it can be visualized by imaging or traditional pathology. Therefore, methylated DNA sequences can form the basis of a sensitive and specific, robust and informative test for the detection of cancer. A spectrum of methods is available for the identification and quantitation of methylated DNA. These include cytosine deamination PCR, semi-quantitative and quantitative methylationspecific PCR (MSP), differential methylation hybridization (DMH), restriction landmark genomic scanning (RLGS), single-nucleotide primer extension Volume 26 - Issue 2 November - 2010 Indian Association for Cancer Research (SNuPE), pyrosequencing, and methylation microarray for large-scale genome analysis. However, MSP is a simple and sensitive method, and is the most commonly employed method for methylation analysis. In prostate cancer, GSTP1, RASSF1A, RARb2 and galectin-3 promoters are frequently methylated (18, 19); while ARF, APC, and DAPK have been found methylated in bladder cancer (18). Among the genes commonly hypermethylated in breast cancer are the p16NK4A, estrogen receptor (ER) alpha, the progesterone receptor (PR), BRCA1, GSTP1, TIMP-3, and E-cadherin (20). Although several hundreds of biomarkers have been found promising for cancer diagnosis, only a handful of biomarkers have been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration during the past two decades (21). This is because most biomarkers lack sufficient sensitivity and/or specificity. To be useful, biomarkers must distinguish between people with cancer and those without. No single biomarker is likely to have 100% sensitivity and 100% specificity for a particular neoplasm. Instead, panels of biomarkers seem to be a promising alternative for the use in clinical laboratories. For example, GSTP1 methylation is detected as low as one prostate cancer cell, but not specific to prostate cancer as the GSTP1 methylation is also present in breast and renal cancers. However, two or multiple genes cohort such as GSTP1/galectin-3 or GSTP1/RARβ2/APC has been shown to be more specific and sensitive biomarkers for prostate cancer (18, 19). However, optimization of this combined assay and its validation in large scale studies are necessary before this combined assay can be considered clinically useful. Acknowledgments : The work carried out in the author's laboratory has been supported by the UMBI Presidential Proof of Concept Award and the National Institute of Health Grants RO3 CA133935-01 and R41CA141970-01A2. References 1. Cancer Projected To Become Leading Cause Of Death Worldwide In 2010. ScienceDaily, Dec. 9, 2008. 2. Xiao GG, Recker RR, Deng HW. Recent Advances in Proteomics and Cancer Biomarker Discovery. Clinical Medicine: Oncology 2008; 2:63-72 3. Grady WM, Parkin RK et al. Epigenetic silencing of the intronic microRNA hsa-miR-342 and its host gene EVL in colorectal cancer. Oncogene. 2008; 27:3880-8. Indian Association for Cancer Research 4. Li C, Simeone DM, Brenner DE et al. Pancreatic cancer serum detection using a lectin/glycoantibody array method. J Proteome Res. 2009; 8:483-92. Pisitkun T 5. , Johnstone R, Knepper MA. Discovery of urinary biomarkers. Mol Cell Proteomics. 2006; 5:176071. 6. Mitchell PS, Parkin RK et al. Circulating microRNAs as stable blood-based markers for cancer detection. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008; 105:10513-8. 7. López-Casas PP, López-Fernández LA. Geneexpression profiling in pancreatic cancer. Expert Rev Mol Diagn. 2010; 10:591-601. 8. Petty RD, Samuel LM et al. APRIL is a novel clinical chemo-resistance biomarker in colorectal adenocarcinoma identified by gene expression profiling. BMC Cancer. 2009; 9:434. 9. Staaf J, Borg A. Zoom-in array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) to detect germline rearrangements in cancer susceptibility genes. Methods Mol Biol. 2010; 653:221-35. 10. Winder T, Lenz HJ. Molecular predictive and prognostic markers in colon cancer. Cancer Treat Rev. 2010; 36:550-6. 11. Volanis D, Kadiyska T et al. Environmental factors and genetic susceptibility promote urinary bladder cancer. Toxicol Lett. 2010;1 93:131-7. 12. Kumar-Sinha C, Tomlins SA, Chinnaiyan AM. Recurrent gene fusions in prostate cancer. Nat Rev Cancer. 2008; 8:497-511. 13. Andreopoulou E, Cristofanilli M. Circulating tumor cells as prognostic marker in metastatic breast cancer. Expert Rev Anticancer Ther. 2010; 10:171-7. 14. Simpson RJ, Lim JW, Moritz RL, Mathivanan S. Exosomes: proteomic insights and diagnostic potential. Expert Rev Proteomics. 2009; 6:267-83. 15. Nilsson J, Skog J et al. Prostate cancer-derived urine exosomes: a novel approach to biomarkers for prostate cancer. Br J Cancer. 2009; 100:1603-7. 16. Taylor DD, Gercel-Taylor C. MicroRNA signatures of tumor-derived exosomes as diagnostic biomarkers of ovarian cancer. Gynecol Oncol. 2008; 110:13-21. 17. Strathdee G, Brown R. Aberrant DNA methylation in cancer: potential clinical interventions. Expert Rev Mol Med 2002; 4:1-17. 18. Cairns P. Gene methylation and early detection of genitourinary cancer: the road ahead. Nature Reviews Cancer. 2007; 7:531-43. 19. Ahmed H. Promoter methylation in prostate cancer NEWSLETTER 05 and its application for the early detection of prostate cancer using serum and urine samples. Biomarkers in Cancer, 2010; 2:17-33. 20. Das PM, Singal R. DNA methylation and cancer. J Clin Oncol. 2004; 22:4632-42. 21. Srivastava S. Cancer Biomarker Discovery and Development in Gastrointestinal Cancers: Early Detection Research Network—A Collaborative Approach. Gastrointest Cancer Res. 2007; 1: S60–S63.Figure legend Volume 26 - Issue 2 November - 2010 06 NEWSLETTER Indian Association for Cancer Research Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition in Cancer Sharmila A. Bapat Research Scientist, National Centre for Cell Science, Pune, India 1. Introduction Migration of epithelial cells has been identified to be a crucial event during development, organogenesis and cancer (Aranda et al., 2008). The process is mediated through changes in cellular architecture and polarity and involves a change in morphology of rigid, polar epithelia to a motile mesenchymal-like shape. The morphological transformation thus mediated is often referred to as Epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT). Although first described during development (Hay ED, 1995), there is considerable debate regarding the similarity of EMT programs in the three different contexts. During development and organogenesis, EMT is an important mechanism that regulates epithelial plasticity by directing cell fate versus cell behavior. Down regulation components of the adherans, tight, desmosomal junctions have been often described as the hallmark of EMT through demonstration of its association with altered cell-cell adhesion and cytoskeleton organization and disruption of cell polarity pathways (Boyer et al., 1988; Savagner P, 2001; Kurrey et al., 2005). The classical hallmarks of cancer include limitless replicative potential, growth factor independence, insensitivity to anti-growth signals, evasion of programmed cell death, sustained angiogenesis and tissue invasion for metastasis (Hanahan & Weinberg, 2000). Study of metastatic processes in cancer over the last decade has identified that carcinoma cells often evoke the EMT program to become invasive and are thought to be responsible for seeding distant dissemination, eventually leading to cancer-related mortality. Following the migration to an amenable microenvironment, the metastasizing cells undergo a reversal of the phenomenon viz. a mesenchymal to epithelial (MET) process that ensures establishment of cells at this site and consequent development of a secondary tumor (Fig. 1). More recently, EMT in the context of cancer has also been associated with resistances to senescence, apoptosis, immune surveillance and therapy, and most interestingly, the acquisition of stem cell–like Volume 26 - Issue 2 November - 2010 characteristics by tumor cells. While the field has grown considerably over the last decade since the involvement of EMT in cancer began to be addressed, the present review discusses a few of the cutting-edge implications of the phenomenon and its associated cellular implications. 2. EMT & MET in Cancer Metastases An all-encompassing definition of EMT has described it as the culmination of protein modification and transcriptional events in response to a defined set of extracellular stimuli leading to a long term, albeit sometimes reversible, cellular change (Hugo et al.,2010). The process thus appears to be regulated at two levels through interactions between cell extrinsic and intrinsic factors. The cell extrinsic factors that trigger EMT include effects on tumor cells like – (i) Depletion of nutrients and limited gaseous exchange brought upon by an enlarging tumor, and (ii) Growth, proliferation and maintenance signals from the tumor niche through remodeling of the extra-cellular matrix components as well as tumor stroma that can produce and/or recruit cytokines and growth factors that influence surrounding cells through autocrine or paracrine mechanisms. Within the tumor cell, the effects of the microenvironment set into motion signaling molecules that trigger off definitive cascades of reactions, signaling and specific transcriptional programs. The altered gene expression patterns ultimately culminate protein profiles that contribute to the process. Core elements of EMT include reduction of cell–cell adherence via the transcriptional repression and delocalization of cadherins (adherens junctions), occludin and claudin (tight junctions), and desmoplakin (desmosomes). The cadherin supporting molecule b-catenin is often lost from the cell membrane and translocates to the nucleus to not only participate in EMT signaling events Indian Association for Cancer Research NEWSLETTER 07 Figure 1 : Epithelial - Mesenchymal Transitions in Cancer (Klymkowsky, 2005), but further establishes its own transcriptional program that supports transformation and disease progression. At the cytoskeletal level, circumferential F-actin fibres are replaced by a network of stress fibers, at the tips of which localize ECM adhesion molecules including integrins, paxillin, focal adhesion kinase. These changes potentially allow cells to separate, lose the apico-basal polarity typical of epithelial cells, and gain a more variable cell shape and changeable cell adhesions, all of which facilitate cell movement. Expression of epithelial intermediate filaments, containing cytokeratins, is typically reduced and the equivalent mesenchymal filament protein vimentin increased. Matrix metalloproteases such as MMP-1, -2, -3, -7, and -14 are frequently upregulated, potentially enabling cells to detach from each other (via E-cadherin cleavage) and to penetrate the basement membrane and migrate away from the primary tumor. Thereby, the process is a highly co-ordinated one that involves several pathways to be activated and others to be inactive. EMT in some cases is reversible, which enables migrating cells to remain responsive to changing environmental cues. Such mesenchymal to epithelial transition (MET) events are further important in establishing tumors at seconday sites after metastases. This suggests that cellular plasticity, the ability to undergo EMT and subsequently MET in the appropriate microenvironments, is a key feature of a successful metastatic cell. 3. Signaling Cues in EMT Several signaling circuits are now recognized to play a role in triggering EMT in cancer. The following pathways have been maximally investigated in this context – (i) Transforming growth factor-β (TGF- β) TGF-β is a secreted cytokine with diverse roles in regulating cellular processes such as proliferation, migration and apoptosis. It is strongly correlated with EMT which can be effected through several pathways including Smad2/3 (Piek et al., 2001), Rho GTPases (Bhowmick et al., 2001), PI3K and AKT (Bakin et al., 2000, 2002), NF-κB (Huber et al., 2005), ERK1/2 (Xie Volume 26 - Issue 2 November - 2010 08 NEWSLETTER et al., 2003), p38 MAPK (Bhowmick et al., 2001; Galliher and Schiemann 2006, 2007, 2008), JNK (Hocevar et al., 2001), Integrin-linked kinase (Lin et al., 2007). (ii) Bone morphogenetic protein 4 (BMP4) Bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs) are critical morphogens and play key roles in epithelialm e s e n c h y m a l t r a n s i t i o n s ( E M Ts ) d u r i n g embryogenesis and organogenesis (Molloy et al., 2008). In the context of cancer, BMP4 induced MSX2 expression through the ERK and p38 MAPK pathways in collaboration with the Smad signaling pathway that resulted in the repression of E-cadherin, induction of vimentin and enhanced cell migration (Hamada et al., 2007). Another pathway of EMT activation is through Rho GTPase activation (Thériault et al., 2007). (iii) Epidermal growth factor (EGF) EGF is known to induce EMT following binding to its receptor, EGFR. EGFR is expressed in a large majority of malignant ovarian tumors and correlated with poor prognosis and chemoresistance (Barr et al., 2008). Most studies suggest that EGF has synergistic interactions TGFβ towards inducing more invasive phenotypes of epithelial cancer cells (Xu et al,. 2010). This cross-talk involves several pathways including mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) and AKT signaling that induce the expression of a series of matrix metalloproteinases, cathepsin, Phospholipase C (PLC) and Cox2 (Uttamsingh et al,. 2008). (iv) Endothelin-1 (ET-1) Endothelin-1 (ET-1) is vasoconstrictor peptide isolated from the first time from the culture media of porcine endothelial cells. ET-1 acts by binding to two G-protein coupled transmembrane receptors, ETA and ETB, and it has been implicated in several physiological and pathological conditions, including cancer. Activation of ETA by ET-1 triggers a phosphatidylinositol 3kinase-dependent integrin-linked kinase (ILK)mediated signaling pathway leading to glycogen synthase kinase-3 β (GSK-3 β) inhibition, Snail and βcatenin stabilization and transcriptional programs that control EMT (Bagnato & Rosanò, 2007). (v) Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) is a stromal-derived factor that activates various signal transduction Volume 26 - Issue 2 November - 2010 Indian Association for Cancer Research pathways including MAPK, PI3 K and AKT. The effects of this growth factor are recognized as being more of cell scattering rather than EMT; however, high expression of HGF and c-MET has been associated with an invasive phenotype and poor prognosis in several cancers (Elliott et al., 2002). Combinatorial growth factor effects of HGF with VEGF and TGFβ suggests co-operative effects that together contribute to cancer metastasis, suggesting that might modulate HGF signaling (Chung et al., 2011). 4. Transcription Factors in EMT The effects of most if not all the signaling mechanisms at the transcriptional level are mediated by several repressors including that target the expression of adherent junction components (E-cadherin, β-catenin), tight junction components (Occludin, Zonula Occludin-1) and desmosomal junction component (Desmoglein-2). While there is an increasing list of such transcriptional repressors, the ones that are currently established to be involved include Snail, Slug, Twist, Zeb1, Zeb2, FoxC2, TCF3 and Goosecoid. Expression of these is considered as prerequisite for invasion and metastasis and extensive profiling has established a negative correlation with patient prognosis in a majority of cases (Nieto et al., 1994; Moreno-Bueno et al., 2008,2009). These factors may regulate each other in a hierarchical pattern where Snail and Slug are initially induced, leading to the activation of the others (Hugo et al., 2010). Several interregulatory relationships are necessary to support such transcriptional cascades, and defining these is considered as being important in maintaining the EMT phenotype. Over the last few years, it is realized that the transcriptional programs thus identified not only primarily induce invasion and metastasis, but also play important role(s) in cell survival. This has increasingly led to an intense examination of the role of the EMT associated transcriptional factors in immune regulation, resistance to senescence and apoptosis as well as stem cell biology, implying their wide range of influence in EMT-dependent and -independent functions during development and disease. 5. EMT & the “Stemness” phenomenon Many tumors have been found to contain a subset of cells referred to as cancer stem cells (CSCs). In contrast to a large majority of the tumor, these cells are undifferentiated and they (re)express stem cell Indian Association for Cancer Research specification genes. The cells can divide asymmetrically to yield differentiated cells as well as cells comprising the original heterogeneous population of the tumor while maintaining their number. Because cancer stem cells display some properties of stem cells, it has been presumed that the presence of such cells in tumors reflects a stem cell origin for cancer. However, recent studies suggest that cancer can originate with outgrowth of differentiated somatic cells, and that cells with properties of cancer stem cells can be generated as tumors progress through a de-differentiation program. In several instances, the occurrence of such cells may be linked to reprogramming of differentiated somatic cells to a stem cell-like phenotype by overexpression of transcription factors involved in epithelialmesenchymal transition (EMT). The clinical significance of CSCs is important since it is opined that these cells survive radio/chemotherapy and can regenerate fresh tumors after treatment. There are two facets to this school of thought. According to one line of research, it appears that CSCs are derived from transformed tumor cells through EMT, and this feature ensures their enrichment in post-treatment recurrent disease. The other school of thought emphasizes on the quiescent nature of stem cells whereby they are able to evade most chemotherapies since these drugs are designed to target actively dividing cells. This evasion may result in tumor dormancy and minimal residual disease to finally culminate in a recurrent, aggressive disease. Thus, the recently emerging relationship between EMT and cancer stem cells is an exciting development in the field. 6. Future Directions EMT has indeed emerged as one of the hottest topics in cancer biology over the decade, since it is realized to be the first step for tumor cells towards stromal invasion, intravasation, extravasation and distant metastasis that ensues disease progression and a increasingly poor prognosis for a majority of patients. Understanding the regulation of the process will thus shed insights on the mechanism of tumor progression towards disease management through development of novel antimetastasis therapies. Profiling of the EMT-associated transcription factors, their upstream signaling cascades and specific transcriptomes is increasingly being studied and the resultant data probed with a view of development of an “EMT signature” for potential use in drug development, NEWSLETTER 09 prognostic testing, and prediction of treatment outcomes. While the classical EMT markers including low E-cadherin, high vimentin, and N-cadherin expression are useful to identify cells with a propensity towards EMT or are circulating tumor cells, screening of stem cell, anti-apoptosis and drug resistance markers will enhance the predictive power of such signatorial profiles. To cite an example, genome-wide transcriptional profiling of breast tumors often reveals cellular subgroups with mesenchymal tendencies and enhanced invasive properties (Basal B), that are distinct from subgroups with either predominantly luminal or mixed basal/luminal features (Neve et al., 2006). EMT gene signatures show specific enrichment within the Basal B subgroup of cell lines, consistent with their over-expression of various EMT transcriptional drivers. Basal B cells are also CD44high/CD24low a phenotype described in association with mammary stem cells. These findings confirm and extend the importance of EMT with Basal B tumors and also may be important in designing molecular classification schemes for metastatic tumors. References 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Bagnato A & Rosanò L (2007). EpithelialMesenchymal Transition in Ovarian Cancer Progression: A Crucial Role for the Endothelin Axis. Cells Tissues Organs 2007;185:85–94 Bakin AV, Rinehart C, Tomlinson AK, Arteaga CL. p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase is required for TGF-β-mediated fibroblastic transdifferentiation and cell migration. J. Cell Sci 2002;115:3193–3206. Bakin AV, Tomlinson AK, Bhowmick NA, Moses HL, Arteaga CL. Phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase function is required for TGF-β-mediated epithelial to mesenchymal transition and cell m i g r a t i o n . J . B i o l . C h e m 2000;275:36803–36810. Barr S, Thomson S, Buck E, Russo S, Petti F, Sujka-Kwok I, Eyzaguirre A, Rosenfeld-Franklin M, Gibson NW, Miglarese M, Epstein D, Iwata KK, Haley JD. Bypassing cellular EGF receptor dependence through epithelial-to-mesenchymallike transitions. Clin Exp Metastasis 2008;25(6):685-93. Bhowmick NA, Zent R, Ghiassi M, McDonnell M, Moses HL. Integrin β1 signaling is necessary for TGF-β activation of p38MAPK and epithelial plasticity. J. Biol. Chem 2001;276:46707–46713. Boyer B, Tucker GC, Delouvée A, Ouhayoun JP, Volume 26 - Issue 2 November - 2010 10 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. NEWSLETTER Thiery JP. Cell adhesion systems: molecular structure and function in embryogenesis and metastasis. Adv Exp Med Biol 1988;233:235-44. Chung JY, Davis JA, Price BD, Staley DM, Wagner MV, Warner SL, Bearss DJ, Hansen MD. Competitive enhancement of HGF-induced epithelial scattering by accessory growth factors. Exp Cell Res 2011 Feb 1;317(3):307-18. Epub 2010 Nov 11. Elliott BE, Hung WL, Boag AH, Tuck AB. The role of hepatocyte growth factor (scatter factor) in epithelial-mesenchymal transition and breast cancer. Can J Physiol Pharmacol. 2002;80(2):91102. Galliher AJ, Schiemann WP. Src phosphorylates Tyr284 in TGF-β type II receptor and regulates TGF-β stimulation of p38 MAPK during breast cancer cell proliferation and invasion. Cancer Res 2007;67:3752–3758. Galliher AJ, Schiemann WP. β3 integrin and Src facilitate TGF-β mediated induction of epithelialmesenchymal transition in mammary epithelial cells. Breast Cancer Res 2006;8:R42. Galliher-Beckley AJ, Schiemann WP. Grb2 binding to Tyr284 in TGF-β is essential for mammary tumor growth and metastasis stimulated by TGF-β. Carcinogenesis 2008;29:244–251. Hamada S, Satoh K, Hirota M, Kimura K, Kanno A, Masamune A, Shimosegawa T. Bone morphogenetic protein 4 induces epithelialmesenchymal transition through MSX2 induction on pancreatic cancer cell line. J Cell Physiol 2007 ;213(3):768-74. Hay ED. An overview of epithelio-mesenchymal transformation. Acta Anat (Basel). 1995;154(1):8-20. Hocevar BA, Smine A, Xu XX, Howe PH. The adaptor molecule Disabled-2 links the TGF-β receptors to the Smad pathway. EMBO J 2001;20:2789–2801. Huber MA, Kraut N, Beug H. Molecular requirements for epithelial-mesenchymal transition during tumor progression. Curr Opin Cell Biol 2005;17:548–558. Hugo HJ, Kokkinos MI, Blick T, Ackland ML, Thompson EW, Newgreen DF. Defining the ECadherin Repressor Interactome in EpithelialMesenchymal Transition: The PMC42 Model as a Case Study. Cells Tissues Organs 2010 Nov 2. [Epub ahead of print] Klymkowsky MW. beta-catenin and its regulatory Volume 26 - Issue 2 November - 2010 Indian Association for Cancer Research network. Hum Pathol. 2005 ;36(3):225-7. 18. Kurrey NK, K A, Bapat SA. Snail and Slug are major determinants of ovarian cancer invasiveness at the transcription level. Gynecol Oncol 2005 ;97(1):155-65. 19. Lin SW, Ke FC, Hsiao PW, Lee PP, Lee MT, Hwang JJ. Critical involvement of ILK in TGF-β1stimulated invasion/migration of human ovarian cancer cells is associated with urokinase plasminogen activator system. Exp Cell Res 2007;313:602–613. 20. Molloy EL, Adams A, Moore JB, Masterson JC, Madrigal-Estebas L, Mahon BP, O'Dea S. BMP4 induces an epithelial-mesenchymal transition-like response in adult airway epithelial cells. Growth Factors 2008;26(1):12-22. 21. Moreno-Bueno G, Peinado H, Molina P, Olmeda D, Cubillo E, Santos V, Palacios J, Portillo F, Cano A. The morphological and molecular features of the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition. Nat Protoc 2009;4(11):1591-613. 22. Moreno-Bueno G, Portillo F, Cano A. Transcriptional regulation of cell polarity in EMT and cancer. Oncogene. 2008 ;27(55):6958-69. 23. Nieto MA, Sargent MG, Wilkinson DG, Cooke J. Control of cell behavior during vertebrate development by Slug, a zinc finger gene. Science 1994 6;264(5160):835-9. 24. Nolan ME, Aranda V, Lee S, Lakshmi B, Basu S, Allred DC, Muthuswamy SK. The polarity protein Par6 induces cell proliferation and is overexpressed in breast cancer. Cancer Res. 2008 ;68(20):8201-9. 25. Piek E, Ju WJ, Heyer J, et al. Functional characterization of TGF-β signaling in Smad2- and Smad3-deficient fibroblasts. J Biol Chem 2001;276:19945–19953. 26. Savagner P. Leaving the neighborhood: molecular mechanisms involved during epithelialmesenchymal transition. Bioessays 2001;23(10):912-23. 27. Thériault BL, Shepherd TG, Mujoomdar ML, Nachtigal MW. BMP4 induces EMT and Rho GTPase activation in human ovarian cancer cells. Carcinogenesis 2007;28(6):1153-62. Epub 2007 Feb 1. 28. Uttamsingh S, Bao X, Nguyen KT, Bhanot M, Gong J, Chan JL, Liu F, Chu TT, Wang LH. Synergistic effect between EGF and TGF-beta1 in inducing oncogenic properties of intestinal epithelial cells. Oncogene 2008; 17;27(18):262634. Indian Association for Cancer Research NEWSLETTER 11 29. Xie L, Law B, Aakre M, et al. TGF-β-regulated gene expression in a mouse mammary gland epithelial cell line. Breast Cancer Res 2003;5:R187–R198. 30. Xu Z, Jiang Y, Steed H, Davidge S, Fu Y. TGFβ and EGF synergistically induce a more invasive phenotype of epithelial ovarian cancer cells. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 2010; 22;401(3):376-81. 31. Neve R M, Chin K, Fridly J et al. A collection of breast cancer cell lines for the study of functionally distinct cancer subtypes. Cancer Cell 2006 ; 10(6): 515–527. 32. Thiery JP, Acloque H, Huang RYJ, Nieto MA. Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transitions in Development and Disease. Cell 2009;139(5):871890. Volume 26 - Issue 2 November - 2010 12 NEWSLETTER Indian Association for Cancer Research Cancer News (Courtesy: www.cancer.gov) Researchers discover key mutation in acute myeloid leukemia NIH-supported discovery may lead to treatment changes; demonstrates power of The Cancer Genome Atlas strategy Researchers have discovered mutations in a particular gene that affects the treatment prognosis for some patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML), an aggressive blood cancer that kills 9,000 Americans annually. The scientists report their results in the Nov. 11, 2010, online issue of The New England Journal of Medicine. The Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis team initially discovered a mutation by completely sequencing the genome of a single AML patient. They then used targeted DNA sequencing on nearly 300 additional AML patient samples to confirm that mutations discovered in one gene correlated with the disease. Although genetic changes previously were found in AML, this work shows that newly discovered mutations in a single gene, called DNA methyltransferase 3A or DNMT3A, appear responsible for treatment failure in a significant number of AML patients. The finding should prove rapidly useful in treating patients and which may provide a molecular target against which to develop new drugs. The study was carried out by researchers from the Washington University Genome Center and the Siteman Cancer Center at Barnes-Jewish Hospital and Washington University School of Medicine. In the study, the researchers found DNMT3A mutations in 21 percent of all AML patients studied and in 34 percent of the patients classified as having an intermediate risk of treatment failure based on widely used laboratory tests of their leukemia cells. More than half of AML patients are classified as having an intermediate risk and are then typically treated with standard chemotherapy. Scientists identify molecular link between BRCA1 protein levels and obesity NCI researchers have defined a possible molecular link between breast cancer risk and obesity. New study results show that a protein called C-terminal binding protein (CtBP) acts to control a gene linked to breast cancer risk in rapidly growing cells by monitoring and responding to how the cells use and store energy Volume 26 - Issue 2 November - 2010 (metabolic state). The cancer susceptibility gene, BRCA1, performs many functions in the cell, including the regulation of cellular growth and division as well as the repair of DNA or genetic damage. In breast tissue, BRCA1 expression rapidly increases in response to the growth effects caused by estrogen. This study, led by Kevin Gardner, M.D., Ph.D., Laboratory of Receptor Biology and Gene Expression,found that under conditions where there is a metabolic imbalance—available cellular energy is greater than the energy required to carry out cellular functions—the activity of CtBP increases and suppresses the expression of BRCA1.The paper is published in the Nov. 21, 2010 issue of Nature Structural and Molecular Biologywith post-doctoral fellow, Li-Jun Di, Ph.D., as first author. The scientists demonstrated metabolic imbalance either by manipulating the metabolic state of the human breast cancer cells with drugs, or by deleting expression of the CtBP gene. When they created a cellular energy imbalance, a condition when the cell's energy stores are very high compared with normal energy usage—much in the way energy imbalance occurs in obesity in humans—the cells produced less BRCA1 type 1 breast cancer susceptibility protein. When they decreased the levels of CtBP or reversed the energy imbalance, they could recover or rescue BRCA1 expression. Past studies have determined that high-fat diets increase the risk and severity of mammary cancer in mice and that calorie restriction has beneficial effects that can reverse this trend. The goal of Gardner and his team is to examine these experimentally induced mammary cancers in combination with available breast-tissue samples from patients in clinical studies to see if increased CtBP activity and lowered BRCA1 expression are important molecular events in breast cancer. News Note: An integrated DNA approach predicts therapeutic response in patients with advancedstage liver cancer NCI scientists have identified epigenetic and genetic signatures in liver cancer cells that may one day be used Indian Association for Cancer Research NEWSLETTER 13 to predict clinical outcomes, with a high degree of accuracy, in patients with advanced-stage liver cancer. The incidence of liver cancer is increasing faster than that of other cancers in the United States. While earlystage liver cancer is amenable to potentially curative therapies, only about 30 percent of patients are diagnosed with early-stage disease. The new research addresses the needs of the subgroup of patients with advanced-stage disease who have few therapeutic options. Results of the study appear in the Oct. 20, 2010, Science Translational Medicine. Liver tumors that progress from premalignant lesions to end-stage liver cancer are driven by genetic changes, as well as those indirectly related to the tumor's DNA (epigenetic changes). Many epigenetic changes are reversible with the application of drugs, thereby offering a multi-target strategy against cancer. Zebularine inhibits an abnormal epigenetic activity called methylation that is frequently linked to cancer. In this study, the research team characterized the epigenetic changes induced by the drug zebularine in liver cancer cells. In an animal xenograft model (human tumor cells transplanted into mice) they found a distinct signature that identified two groups of tumor cell responses,those sensitive and those resistant to zebularine. Zebularine treatment of liver tumors bearing the sensitive profile resulted in increased survival and a decrease in metastasis to the lungs. Importantly, if this same result repeats itself in cancer patients, a zebularine sensitive signature could identify a subclass of patients—who today have poor survival and few treatment options—able to benefit from therapeutic agents that target the cancer epigenome. Volume 26 - Issue 2 November - 2010 14 NEWSLETTER Indian Association for Cancer Research Congratulations Dr. Heena Dave Dr. Heena Dave, working at Receptor & Growth Factor Laboratory, The Gujarat Cancer & Research Institute, Ahmedabad has recently completed her 'Fulbright-Nehru Doctoral and Professional Research Fellowship 2009 – 2010'. This fellowship was awarded by US Department of State and Government of India. She was working at Weill Medical College of Cornell University, New York, US. She presented a paper at 101st Annual Meeting of American Association for Cancer Research at Washington, DC, USA during April 17th – April 21st, 2010. She was awarded Dr. Benjamin L. Van Duuren Award for her paper. She was amongst one of the three awardees in 2010 from amongst Indian and African Fulbrighters in the fields of natural sciences and public health. The title of her presentation was: Transforming growth factor beta as potential prognostic biomarker of breast cancer: Evidence of 'TGF-β switch' (Abstract Number: 1754). This work was carried out at Receptor & grwoth Factor Laboratory, The Gujarat Cancer & Research Institute, Ahmedabad and was a part of her Ph. D. project. Recently, she was awarded Ph. D. degree (Life Sciences) from Gujarat University under the guidance of Dr. Sunil Trivedi. The title of her thesis was 'Study of Transforming Growth Factor Beta Axis in Breast Cancer'. We heartily congratulate our life member. Volume 26 - Issue 2 November - 2010 Indian Association for Cancer Research NEWSLETTER 15 Spotlight on…….. Dr. Pier Paolo Pandolfi, Recipient of the Pezcoller Foundation-AACR International Award for Cancer Research -2011 IACR family congratulates,Dr. Pier Paolo Pandolfi for his success!! Pier Paolo Pandolfi, M.D., Ph.D., is the recipient of the 2011 Pezcoller Foundation-AACR International Award for Cancer Research for his outstanding work in the field of cancer genetics and mouse models for cancer. This work has contributed to new therapies for treating cancers. “Dr. Pandolfi's research has had a profound impact on our understanding of the molecular underpinnings of acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL),” said Margaret Foti, Ph.D., M.D., chief executive officer of the AACR. “His laboratory's mouse models for various subtypes of APL have shown efficacy when utilizing different drug combinations. Clearly, this innovative research is leading to progress in the treatment of other types of cancer.” Pandolfi is the George C. Reisman Professor of Medicine and a Professor of pathology at Harvard Medical School, Director of research at the Beth Israel Deaconess Cancer Center, and Director of the cancer genetics program and chief of the division of genetics in the department of medicine at the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. His studies have had an impact on the cancer research arena by broadening the understanding of the molecular basis of cancer. The research carried out in Pandolfi's laboratory has been important in understanding the molecular mechanisms and genetics underlying the pathogenesis of leukemias, lymphomas and solid tumors, as well as in modeling these cancers in mice. Among his many accomplishments, Pandolfi and colleagues have characterized the function of oncoproteins and genes involved in the chromosomal translocations of APL, as well as of major tumor suppressors such as PTEN and p53, and novel proto-oncogenes, such as POKEMON. These accomplishments have led to the development of novel and effective therapeutic strategies, and, as a result, APL is now considered a curable disease. Additional novel therapeutic concepts have emerged from Pandolfi's research, which are currently being tested in clinical trials. More recently, Pandolfi and colleagues have presented a new theory describing how mRNA, both coding and non-coding, exerts biological functions with profound implications for human genetics, cell biology and cancer biology. Pandolfi received his medical degree in 1989 and his doctorate in 1996 from the University of Perugia in Italy, after he studied philosophy at the University of Rome. He received postgraduate training at the National Institute for Medical Research and the University of London in the United Kingdom. In 1994, Pandolfi became an assistant member of the molecular biology program and the department of human genetics at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. He grew through the ranks to become a member in the cancer biology and genetics program at the Sloan-Kettering Institute; Professor of molecular biology and human genetics, and Professor of molecular biology in pathology and laboratory medicine at the Weill Graduate School of Medical Sciences at Cornell University; and head of the molecular and developmental biology laboratories, and the incumbent of the Albert C. Foster Endowed Chair Volume 26 - Issue 2 November - 2010 16 NEWSLETTER for Cancer Research at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. Among his lauded career experiences, Pandolfi has also received numerous awards including: the LLSA Scholar Award (1997); the Irma T. Hirschl Trust Award (1999); the Alexandra J. Kefalides Prize for Leukemia Research (1999); the Hamdan Award for Medical Research Excellence (2000); the Lombroso Prize for Cancer Research of the Weizmann Institute of Science (2001); the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society's Stohlman Scholar Award (2001); the William and Linda Steere Foundation Award (2004); and, the prize for Scientific Excellence in Medicine from the American-Italian Cancer Foundation (2005). He also has been awarded the National Institutes of Health MERIT Award, the Fondazione Cortese International Award, the Prostate Cancer Foundation Creativity Award and the Ischia International Award. In 2006, Pandolfi was elected as a member of the American Society for Clinical Investigation and the American Association of Physicians, and the following year he became a member of the European Molecular Biology Organization. The Pezcoller Foundation-AACR International Award, recognizes an individual scientist of international renown who has made a major scientific discovery in basic or translational cancer research. Volume 26 - Issue 2 November - 2010 Indian Association for Cancer Research