4.6 Article

Glypican 3 Overexpression across a Broad Spectrum of Tumor Types Discovered with Functional Genomic mRNA Profiling of a Large Cancer Database

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PATHOLOGY
Volume 188, Issue 9, Pages 1973-1981

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajpath.2018.05.014

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Funding

  1. Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO)-VENI grant [916-16025]
  2. Bas Mulder award from the Alpe d'HuZes/Dutch Cancer Society [RUG 2013-5960]
  3. Mandema stipend
  4. advanced European Research Council grant OnQview

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Glypican 3 (GPC3), a membrane-bound heparan sulfate proteoglycan, is overexpressed in approximately 70% to 80% of hepatocellular carcinomas, but is not expressed commonly in healthy tissues. This raised interest in GPC3 as a drug target and several GPC3-targeting drugs are in clinical development. We therefore predicted GPC3 protein overexpression across tumors and validated these predictions. Functional genomic mRNA profiling was applied to the expression profiles of 18,055 patient-derived tumor samples to predict GPC3 overexpression at the protein level in 60 tumor types and subtypes using healthy tissues as reference. For validation, predictions were compared with immunohistochemical (IHC) staining of a breast cancer tissue microarray and literature data reporting IHC GPC3 over expression in various solid, hematologic, and pediatric tumors. The percentage of samples with predicted GPC3 overexpression was 77% for hepatocellular carcinomas (n = 364), 45% for squamous cell lung cancers (n = 405), and 19% for head and neck squamous cell cancers (n = 344). Breast cancer tissue microarray analysis showed GPC3 expression ranged from 12% to 17% in subgroups based on estrogen receptor and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 status. In 28 of 34 tumor types for which functional genomic mRNA data could be compared with INC there was a relative difference of <= 10%. This study provides a data-driven prioritization of tumor types and subtypes for future research with GPC3-targeting therapies.

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