4.4 Article

Parafibromin expression is an independent prognostic factor for colorectal carcinomas

Journal

HUMAN PATHOLOGY
Volume 42, Issue 8, Pages 1089-1102

Publisher

W B SAUNDERS CO-ELSEVIER INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.humpath.2010.10.024

Keywords

Colorectal carcinoma; Parafibromin; Pathogenesis; Progression; Prognosis

Categories

Funding

  1. Shenyang Outstanding Talent Foundation of China (Shenyang, China)
  2. Ministry of Personnel, Shenyang Science and Technology, Shenyang, China [1091175-1-00, F10-149-9-25]
  3. Scientific Research Foundation for the Returned Overseas Chinese Scholars, State Education Ministry (Beijing, China)
  4. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports and Technology of Japan, Tokyo, Japan [20659109, 21790624]
  5. Japanese Smoking Research Foundation (Tokyo, Japan)
  6. Japanese Uehara Memorial Foundation
  7. Research Grants for JSPS Postdoctoral Fellows (Tokyo, Japan)

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Parafibromin is a protein encoded by hyperparathyroidism 2, and its down-regulated expression is involved in the pathogenesis of parathyroid, breast, and gastric carcinomas. This study aimed to clarify the roles of parafibromin expression in tumorigenesis, progression, and prognosis of colorectal carcinomas. Parafibromin-expressing plasmid was transfected into DLD-1 cells with the phenotypes, and related molecules were examined. Parafibromin expression was examined in colorectal samples by immunohistochemistry, in situ hybridization, Western blot, or reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction. It was found that parafibromin overexpression could cause G1 arrest and enhance differentiation of DLD-1 cells. There was a high expression of p21, p27, and cyclin E, but low expression of cyclin D1 messenger RNA, phospho-cdc2, and phospho-cdc25c proteins. Parafibromin could inhibit c-myc, messenger RNA expression by binding to c-myc promoter. Expression levels of nuclear parafibromin and parafibromin messenger RNA were decreased from colorectal nonneoplastic mucosa and adenomas to carcinomas (P < .05). Immunohistochemically, parafibromin expression was inversely correlated with tumor size, depth of invasion, lymph node metastasis, clinicopathologic staging, and poor prognosis of carcinomas (P < .05). It was suggested that parafibromin overexpression might suppress cell cycle progression and promote differentiation of DLD-1 cells. Aberrant parafibromin expression possibly contributes to the pathogenesis, growth, invasion, and metastasis of colorectal carcinomas and could be regarded as an independent factor to indicate a favorable prognosis for patients with colorectal carcinomas. (C) 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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