3.8 Article

RSF-1 overexpression determines cancer progression and drug resistance in cervical cancer

Journal

BIOMEDICINE-TAIWAN
Volume 8, Issue 1, Pages 26-32

Publisher

CHINA MEDICAL UNIV-CMU
DOI: 10.1051/bmdcn/2018080104

Keywords

RSF-1 (HBXAP); Cervical cancer; Clinical pathological characteristics; Anti-RSF-1 therapy

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81372778]
  2. Medical Science and Technology Project of Shandong [2011HZ097]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Shandong [ZR2012HM010]
  4. Taishan Scholars Program of Shandong Province, China [ts201511073]
  5. Ministry of Science and Technology [NSC-102-2628-B-110-003-MY3, MOST 103-2314-B-110-002-MY3, MOST 104-2911-002-302]
  6. Project of China Medical University Hospital, Taiwan [DMR103-062]

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Background: Remodeling spacing factor 1 (RSF-1/HBXAP) has been linked to a variety of cancer types, however, its roles and the therapeutic potential are not clear in cervical cancer. Methods: RSF-1 expression in cancer tissues was analyzed by immunohistochemical staining followed by statistical analysis with SPSS. Anti-RSF-1 studies were performed by treating cells with specific siRNA or a dominant mutant form (RSF-D4). Results: RSF-1 expression correlates with cancer progression that strongly-positive staining can be found in 67.7% carcinomas and 66.7% CIN lesions, but none in normal tissues. Such overexpression also associated with increased tumor size, poor differentiation, higher nodal metastasis and advanced clinical stages. Kaplan-Meier analysis confirmed that cancer patients with high RSF-1 levels exhibited a significantly shorter survival time than those with low RSF-1 levels. Downregulation of RSF-1 by siRNA silencing or RSF-D4 reduced cell growth and increased drug sensitivity toward paclitaxel treatment in HeLa cells. Conclusions: RSF-1 participates in the tumor progression of cervical cancer and could be considered as an early prognostic marker for cancer development and clinical outcome. Therapies based on anti-RSF-1 activity may be beneficial for patients with RSF-1 overexpression in their tumors.

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