Overexpression of heat shock protein 90 through the downregulation of miR-9-5p in extramammary Paget's disease.
Takehiro OhnumaMyangat Tselmeg MijiddorjIkko KajiharaSoichiroa SawamuraRyoko SakamotoSaki OtukaSaori Kanazawa-YamadaKatsunari MakinoJun AoiShinichi MasuguchiSatoshi FukushimaPublished in: The Journal of dermatology (2023)
Heat shock protein 90 (HSP90) facilitates diverse cellular processes by interacting process with more than 200 client proteins. Overexpression of HSP90 contributes to the pathogenesis of various malignant tumors, and HSP90 inhibitors attenuate the progression of malignant tumors in vitro/vivo. Numerous clinical trials have used HSP90 inhibitors to treat several cancers, and pimitespib (an HSP90 inhibitor) is covered by insurance for advanced gastrointestinal stromal tumor in Japan. In this study, we investigated the expression pattern of HSP90 and analyzed its clinical significance in extramammary Paget's disease (EMPD). All 77 EMPD tissues investigated were positive for HSP90 expression. The immunoreactivity of HSP90 in fetal cases due to EMPD tended to be highly stained. Although there was no significant difference in HSP90 mRNA levels between 24 paired lesional and nonlesional tissues, microRNA-inhibiting HSP90 levels in tumor tissues were significantly decreased compared with those in normal tissues. Thus, HSP90 may play an important role in the pathogenesis of EMPD and may be a novel therapeutic target for EMPD.