Department of Urologic Surgery, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2012;7(5):e36669. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0036669. Epub 2012 May 10.
Approximately 50% of patients with muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC) develop metastatic disease, which is almost invariably lethal. However, our understanding of pathways that drive aggressive behavior of MIBC is incomplete. Members of the FOXA subfamily of transcription factors are implicated in normal urogenital development and urologic malignancies. FOXA proteins are implicated in normal urothelial differentiation, but their role in bladder cancer is unknown. We examined FOXA expression in commonly used in vitro models of bladder cancer and in human bladder cancer specimens, and used a novel in vivo tissue recombination system to determine the functional significance of FOXA1 expression in bladder cancer. Logistic regression analysis showed decreased FOXA1 expression is associated with increasing tumor stage (p<0.001), and loss of FOXA1 is associated with high histologic grade (p<0.001). Also, we found that bladder urothelium that has undergone keratinizing squamous metaplasia, a precursor to the development of squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) exhibited loss of FOXA1 expression. Furthermore, 81% of cases of SCC of the bladder were negative for FOXA1 staining compared to only 40% of urothelial cell carcinomas. In addition, we showed that a subpopulation of FOXA1 negative urothelial tumor cells are highly proliferative. Knockdown of FOXA1 in RT4 bladder cancer cells resulted in increased expression of UPK1B, UPK2, UPK3A, and UPK3B, decreased E-cadherin expression and significantly increased cell proliferation, while overexpression of FOXA1 in T24 cells increased E-cadherin expression and significantly decreased cell growth and invasion. In vivo recombination of bladder cancer cells engineered to exhibit reduced FOXA1 expression with embryonic rat bladder mesenchyme and subsequent renal capsule engraftment resulted in enhanced tumor proliferation. These findings provide the first evidence linking loss of FOXA1 expression with histological subtypes of MIBC and urothelial cell proliferation, and suggest an important role for FOXA1 in the malignant phenotype of MIBC.
约 50%的肌层浸润性膀胱癌(MIBC)患者会发展为转移性疾病,这几乎是致命的。然而,我们对驱动 MIBC 侵袭性行为的途径的了解并不完整。转录因子 FOXA 亚家族的成员参与正常泌尿生殖系统发育和泌尿系统恶性肿瘤。FOXA 蛋白参与正常尿路上皮分化,但它们在膀胱癌中的作用尚不清楚。我们研究了 FOXA 在常用的膀胱癌体外模型和人类膀胱癌标本中的表达,并使用新型体内组织重组系统来确定 FOXA1 在膀胱癌中的功能意义。逻辑回归分析显示,FOXA1 表达降低与肿瘤分期增加相关(p<0.001),FOXA1 缺失与高组织学分级相关(p<0.001)。此外,我们发现经历角化鳞状化生的膀胱尿路上皮,这是鳞状细胞癌(SCC)发展的前体,FOXA1 表达缺失。此外,81%的膀胱癌 SCC 病例 FOXA1 染色阴性,而尿路上皮细胞癌只有 40%。此外,我们还表明,FOXA1 阴性的尿路上皮肿瘤细胞亚群具有高度增殖性。在 RT4 膀胱癌细胞中敲低 FOXA1 导致 UPK1B、UPK2、UPK3A 和 UPK3B 的表达增加,E-钙黏蛋白表达降低,细胞增殖显著增加,而在 T24 细胞中过表达 FOXA1 则增加 E-钙黏蛋白表达,显著降低细胞生长和侵袭。将表达降低的 FOXA1 的膀胱癌细胞与胚胎大鼠膀胱间充质细胞重组,并随后进行肾囊植入,结果发现肿瘤增殖增强。这些发现首次将 FOXA1 表达缺失与 MIBC 的组织学亚型和尿路上皮细胞增殖联系起来,并提示 FOXA1 在 MIBC 的恶性表型中具有重要作用。