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Expression of the mitotic checkpoint gene MAD2L2 has prognostic significance in colon cancer

✍ Scribed by Caroline Rimkus; Jan Friederichs; Robert Rosenberg; Bernhard Holzmann; Jörg-Rüdiger Siewert; Klaus-Peter Janssen


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2006
Tongue
French
Weight
198 KB
Volume
120
Category
Article
ISSN
0020-7136

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Aneuploidy and genetic instability are a hallmark of colorectal cancer and other solid tumors, and they are thought to enhance tumor progression. The gene MAD2L____2 (mitotic arrest deficient 2‐like 2) encodes the spindle checkpoint protein MAD2L2 (or MAD2B), a key component of a surveillance system that delays anaphase until all chromosomes are correctly oriented. Defects in this mitotic checkpoint are known to contribute to genetic instability, i.e., numerical and structural aberrations of chromosomes. We have previously identified MAD2L____2 as significantly upregulated in locally restricted colorectal tumors by gene expression profiling. So far, MAD2L____2 has not been reported to play a major role in human cancer in contrast to its homologue MAD2. To address this question, 118 histologically confirmed colorectal lesions were analyzed by quantitative real‐time PCR for expression of MAD2L____2, and compared to normal colon tissue from 11 patients. Twenty‐five out of 118 tumor samples (21%) showed MAD2L____2 overexpression of 3‐fold or more compared to normal colon, and the fraction of overexpressing tumors increased with tumor stage. Correspondingly, protein levels of MAD2L2 were found to be significantly upregulated in tumors as compared to matched normal tissue. Tumors with upregulated MAD2L____2 expression had significantly higher numbers of aberrant mitotic figures (anaphase bridges), an indication of chromosomal instability. Elevated expression of MAD2L____2 was significantly correlated with reduced patient survival. By multivariate analysis, MAD2L____2 expression was retained as an independent prognostic parameter for patient survival. Thus, our results demonstrate that overexpression of MAD2L____2 correlates with bad prognosis in colorectal cancer. © 2006 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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