4.6 Article

A Claudin-Based Molecular Signature Identifies High-Risk, Chemoresistant Colorectal Cancer Patients

Journal

CELLS
Volume 10, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells10092211

Keywords

claudin-1; claudin-7; CRC; chemoresistance; metastasis; molecular signature

Categories

Funding

  1. VA [BX002086]
  2. NIH/NCI [CA250383, CA216746]
  3. Fred and Pamela Buffet Cancer Center - National Cancer Institute Cancer Center Support Grant [P30 CA036727, DK124095, BX002761]
  4. Colorectal Cancer Alliance Chris4Life Rectal Cancer Award [R37 CA248289-02, P30 CA008748]

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Identifying a molecular signature based on claudin-1 and claudin-7 can help predict patient survival and response to treatment in colorectal cancer. This signature is associated with poor prognosis and characteristics of treatment-resistant CRC.
Identifying molecular characteristics that are associated with aggressive cancer phenotypes through gene expression profiling can help predict treatment responses and clinical outcomes. Claudins are deregulated in colorectal cancer (CRC). In CRC, increased claudin-1 expression results in epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition and metastasis, while claudin-7 functions as a tumor suppressor. In this study, we have developed a molecular signature based on claudin-1 and claudin-7 associated with poor patient survival and chemoresistance. This signature was validated using an integrated approach including publicly available datasets and CRC samples from patients who either responded or did not respond to standard-of-care treatment, CRC cell lines, and patient-derived rectal and colon tumoroids. Transcriptomic analysis from a patient dataset initially yielded 23 genes that were differentially expressed along with higher claudin-1 and decreased claudin-7. From this analysis, we selected a claudins-associated molecular signature including PIK3CA, SLC6A6, TMEM43, and ASAP-1 based on their importance in CRC. The upregulation of these genes and their protein products was validated using multiple CRC patient datasets, in vitro chemoresistant cell lines, and patient-derived tumoroid models. Additionally, blocking these genes improved 5-FU sensitivity in chemoresistant CRC cells. Our findings propose a new claudin-based molecular signature that associates with poor prognosis as well as characteristics of treatment-resistant CRC including chemoresistance, metastasis, and relapse.

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