4.7 Article

Biphasic Expression of Atypical Chemokine Receptor (ACKR) 2 and ACKR4 in Colorectal Neoplasms in Association with Histopathological Findings

Journal

BIOMOLECULES
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biom11010008

Keywords

resolution of inflammation; chemoprevention; decoy receptors; colorectal adenomas; colorectal cancer; CC chemokines

Funding

  1. Wroclaw Medical University [SUB.A040.19.016]

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The study found differential expression of ACKR2 and ACKR4 in colorectal polyps and adenocarcinomas, with ACKR2 primarily downregulated in adenomas and cancers, while ACKR4 mainly downregulated in adenocarcinomas. These expression changes have already occurred in precancerous lesions, emphasizing the potential for chemoprevention by manipulating ACKRs' expression.
Facilitating resolution of inflammation using atypical chemokine receptors (ACKR) as an anticancer strategy is considered but requires a deeper understanding of receptor role in carcinogenesis. We aimed at transcriptional analysis (RTqPCR) of ACKR2 and ACKR4 expression in colorectal adenoma-adenocarcinoma sequence in paired normal-neoplastic tissues from 96 polyps and 51 cancers. On average, ACKR2 was downregulated in neoplastic as compared to non-affected tissue in polyp (by 2.7-fold) and cancer (by 3.1-fold) patients. The maximal downregulation (by 8.2-fold) was observed in adenomas with the highest potential for malignancy and was gradually lessening through cancer stages I-IV, owing to increased receptor expression in tumors. On average, ACKR4 was significantly downregulated solely in adenocarcinomas (by 1.5-fold), less so in patients with lymph node metastasis, owing to a gradual decrease in ACKR4 expression among N0-N1-N2 cancers in non-affected tissue without changes in tumors. In adenomas, ACKR4 downregulation in neoplastic tissue increased with increasing potential for malignancy and contribution of villous growth pattern. ACKR4 expression increased in non-affected tissue with a concomitant decrease in pathological mucosa. In conclusion, the changes in ACKRs expression occur already in precancerous colorectal lesions, culminating in the adenomas with the highest potential for malignancy. Therefore, chemoprevention by manipulating ACKRs' expression is worth exploration.

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