4.6 Article

Carboxypeptidase N2 as a Novel Diagnostic and Prognostic Biomarker for Lung Adenocarcinoma

Journal

FRONTIERS IN ONCOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2022.843325

Keywords

CPN2; lung adenocarcinoma; biomarker; diagnosis; prognosis

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81872659, 82173556]
  2. Natural Science Foundation Project of Chongqing CSTC of China [cstc2018jcyjAX0233]
  3. foundation of Youth Development Projects from the Southwest Hospital of The Third Military Medical University [SWH2018QNLC-08]

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The upregulation of CPN2 in lung adenocarcinoma is associated with poor clinical outcome and may serve as an independent prognostic factor. CPN2 is positively correlated with multiple signaling pathways and its knockdown inhibits cell proliferation, clone formation, invasion, and migration in lung adenocarcinoma.
Carboxypeptidase N2 (CPN2) is a plasma metallo-protease that cleaves basic amino acids from the C-terminal of peptides and proteins. Emerging evidence showed that carboxypeptidases perform many diverse functions in the body and play key roles in tumorigenesis. However, the clinical significance and biological functions of CPN2 in lung adenocarcinoma remain unclear. Our study aimed to explore the potential role and functions of CPN2 in lung adenocarcinoma. The results showed that the transcription level of CPN2 was significantly increased in the tumor tissues of lung adenocarcinoma patients compared to the adjacent normal tissues in The Cancer Genome Atlas cohort (P < 0.05). The survival plots showed that the overall survival of patients with a high expression of CPN2 was significantly lower than that of patients with a low expression of CPN2, both in the Kaplan-Meier database and the clinical sample cohort (P < 0.05). The tissue microarray analysis found that CPN2 protein expression was significantly positively correlated with node status and tumor stage as well as tumor malignancy (P < 0.05). Further univariate and multivariate Cox regression analyses showed that CPN2 may act as an independent prognostic factor in patients with lung adenocarcinoma (P < 0.05). In addition, the analysis of co-expression genes from LinkedOmics showed that CPN2 was positively associated with many genes of fibrillar collagen family members and the PI3K-Akt pathway. The gene set enrichment analysis showed that a higher expression of CPN2 may participate in mTOR, TGF-BETA, NOTCH, TOLL-like-receptor, WNT, and MAPK signaling pathway in lung adenocarcinoma. Notably, the knockdown of CPN2 significantly inhibited the ability of cell proliferation, clone formation, invasion, and migration. Our findings suggested that the upregulation of CPN2 is associated with a worse clinical outcome in lung adenocarcinoma and cancer-related pathways, which laid the foundation for further research on CPN2 during carcinogenesis.

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