Cadherin Expression Profiles Define Glioblastoma Differentiation and Patient Prognosis.
Carolina NoronhaAna Sofia RibeiroRita CarvalhoNuno MendesJoaquim ReisClaudia C FariaRicardo TaipaJoana ParedesPublished in: Cancers (2024)
Cadherins are cell-cell adhesion proteins which have been strongly implicated in cancer invasion, dissemination and metastasis capacity; thus, they are key players in the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) program. However, their role in glioblastoma (GBM), a primary central nervous system aggressive tumor, remains to be clarified. N-, E- and P-cadherin expression was analyzed on a large series of GBMs, characterized with clinical, imaging and neuropathological parameters, as well as with patients' survival data. In addition, cadherins' expression was studied in match-recurrent cases. Using TCGA data, cadherin expression profiles were also evaluated according to GBM transcription subtypes. N-cadherin expression was observed in 81.5% of GBM, followed by E-cadherin in 31% and P-cadherin in 20.8%. Upon tumor recurrence, P-cadherin was the only significantly upregulated cadherin compared with the primary tumor, being positive in 65.8% of the cases. Actually, P-cadherin gain was observed in 51.4% of matched primary-recurrent cases. Cadherins' co-expression was also explored. Interestingly, E- and N-cadherin co-expression identified a GBM subgroup with frequent epithelial differentiation and a significant survival benefit. On the other hand, subgroups with P-cadherin expression carried the worse prognosis. P- and N-cadherin co-expression correlated with the presence of a mesenchymal phenotype. Expressions of isolated P-cadherin or E- and P-cadherin co-expression were associated with imaging characteristics of aggressiveness, to highly heterogeneous tumors, an d to worse patient survival. Classical cadherins co-expression subgroups present consistent clinical, imaging, neuropathological and survival differences, which probably reflect different states of an EMT-like program in GBM.
Keyphrases
- cell adhesion
- poor prognosis
- cell migration
- binding protein
- stem cells
- high resolution
- squamous cell carcinoma
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- randomized controlled trial
- clinical trial
- mass spectrometry
- quality improvement
- single cell
- mesenchymal stem cells
- lymph node metastasis
- ejection fraction
- free survival
- open label
- photodynamic therapy
- prognostic factors
- cerebrospinal fluid
- squamous cell
- fluorescence imaging
- double blind