| P.O.Box 2345, Beijing 100023,China | World J Gastroenterol 2003 Apr 15;9(4):650-654 |
| Email: wjg@wjgnet.com | WJG ISSN 1007-9327 CN 14-1219/ R |
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Loss of clusterin both in serum and tissue correlates with the tumorigenesis of esophageal squamous cell carcinoma via proteomics approaches
Li-Yong Zhang, Wan-Tao Ying, You-Sheng Mao, Hong-Zhi He, Yu
Liu, Hui-Xin Wang, Fang Liu, Kun Wang,
De-Chao Zhang, Ying Wang, Min Wu, Xiao-Hong Qian, Xiao-Hang Zhao
Li-Yong Zhang, Hong-Zhi He, Yu
Liu, Hui-Xin Wang, Fang Liu, Ying Wang, Min Wu, Xiao-Hang Zhao,
National Laboratory of Molecular Oncology, Cancer Institute and Hospital,
Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical College, Beijing
100021, Beijing, China
You-Sheng Mao, De-Chao Zhang,
Department of Pectoral Surgery, Cancer Institute and Hospital, Chinese Academy
of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical College, Beijing 100021, Beijing,
China
Wan-Tao Ying, Xiao-Hong Qian,
Department of Genomics and Proteomics, Beijing Institute of Radiation Medicine,
Beijing 100850, China
Kun Wang,
Beijing Yanjing Hospital, Beijing 100037, China
Supported by
the Major State Basic Research Development Program of China, No.G19980512 and
No.2001CB510201; the National Hi-Tech R & D Program of China,
No.2001AA227091 and No.2001AA233061; National Natural Science Foundation of
China, No.39990570, No.30171049, 30225045 and No.39990600
Correspondence to:
Dr. Xiao-Hang Zhao, National Laboratory of Molecular Oncology, Cancer Institute
and Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical
College, Beijing 100021, Beijing, China. zhaoxh@pubem.cicams.ac.cn
Telephone:
+86-10-67709015 Fax: +86-10-67709015
Dr. Xiao-Hong Qian, Department of Genomics and Proteomics, Beijing Institute of
Radiation Medicine, Beijing 100850, China. qianxh@nic.bmi.ac.cn
Telephone:
+86-10-68279585 Fax: +86-10-68279585
Received:
2002-11-26 Accepted: 2002-12-18
Abstract
AIM: To identify the differentially
secreted proteins or polypeptides associated with tumorigenesis of esophageal
squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) from serum and to find potential tumor secreted
biomarkers.
METHODS: Proteins
from human ESCC tissue and its matched adjacent normal tissue; pre-surgery and
post-surgery serum; and pre-surgery and normal control serum were separated by
two-dimensional electrophoresis (2-DE) to identify differentially expressed
proteins. The silver-stained 2-DE were scanned with digital ImageScanner and
analyzed with ImageMaster 2D Elite 3.10 software. A cluster of protein spots
differentially expressed were selected and identified with matrix-assisted laser
desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF-MS). One of
the differentially expressed proteins, clusterin, was down-regulated in cancer
tissue and pre-surgery serum, but it was reversed in post-surgery serum. The
results were confirmed by semi-quantitative reverse-transcription (RT)-PCR and
western blot.
RESULTS: Comparisons
of the protein spots identified on the 2-DE maps from human matched sera showed
that some proteins were differentially expressed, with most of them showing no
differences in composition, shape or density. Being analyzed by MALDI-TOF-MS and
database searching, clusterin was differentially expressed and down-regulated in
both cancer tissue and pre-surgery serum compared with their counterparts. The
results were also validated by RT-PCR and western blot.
CONCLUSION: The
differentially expressed clusterin may play a key role during tumorigenesis of
ESCC. The 2DE-MS based proteomic approach is one of the powerful tools for
discovery of secreted markers from peripheral.
Zhang LY, Ying WT, Mao YS, He HZ, Liu Y, Wang HX, Liu F, Wang K, Zhang DC, Wang
Y, Wu M, Qian XH, Zhao XH. Loss of clusterin both in serum and tissue correlates
with the tumorigenesis of esophageal squamous cell carcinoma via proteomics
approaches. World J Gastroenterol 2003; 9(4): 650-654
http://www.wjgnet.com/1007-9327/9/650.htm
INTRODUCTION
Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC),
the major histological form of esophageal cancer, is one of the most common
malignant tumors in China especially in the north part of the country. Human
ESCC carcinogenesis is a multistage process involving multifactorial etiology
and genetic-environment interactions[1-3]. Patients with ESCC have a
poor prognosis, with 5-year survival rates of less than 10 %, because of the
rapid spread and of the cancer associated malnutrition due to dysphagia and
cachexia[4]. The molecular mechanisms that underlie the tumor
formation and progression are still not completely perspicuous, although several
progresses based on alterations of gene expression[5] and
disregulated proteins, such as annexin I[6] and tumor rejection
antigen[7] in esophageal cancer via proteomic approaches have been
reported recently. Discovery of new markers to discriminate tumorigenic from
normal cells, as well as the different stage is critical important for early
detection and diagnosis of ESCC. The success of the Human Genome Project and the
initiation of human proteome are strongly facilitating these efforts as
tremendous information of genes and proteins are currently available[8,9].
It would be possible to undertake comprehensive profiling of tumor at the
proteomics level to identify protein alterations that are unpredictable at
either the genomics or transcriptomics levels[10]. However there is
no comprehensive study of esophageal cancer protein profiling or protein
expression patterns have been generated, especially the tumor-associated serum
protein biomarkers. To identify specific protein tumor markers both in serum and
tissue by proteomics approaches is a currently critical issue[8,11,12].
Tumor associated proteins
as well as post-translational modifications ca
n be identified via proteomic
methodologies. In the present study, we used the 2-DE/mass spectrometry
(MS)-based proteomic analysis to profile the proteins in serum of ESCC patients.
We analyzed 17 pairs of patient-matched pre- and post-surgery as well as normal
and tumor sera from ESCC patients to discover the alterations of expression
profiling. We first found the clusterin is loss in both serum and tissue of ESCC.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Specimens and preparation
The esophageal specimens were from
patients diagnosed with esophageal cancer by the pathologists in Cancer Hospital
of Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences (CAMS) (Beijing, China). The study was
approved by the Institutional Review Board of Cancer Institute of CAMS. The
pre-surgery serum were obtained from the first physical examination after the
patients presented to the hospital, ESCC tumor tissues were obtained immediately
after surgical resection and the post-surgery serum were obtained from the
matched patients during the day 8 to day 10 after surgery. Sera described in
Table 1, were centrifuged at 3 000 g at 4 ℃ for 15 min. Both tissue and serum samples were snap-frozen in
liquid nitrogen immediately and then stored at -80 ℃. The tissues were homogenized in five volumes of lysis buffer
[8M urea, 4 % CHAPS, 2 % Pharmalyte, pH 3-10, 10 mM DTT] and centrifuged at 12
000 g at 4 ℃ for 40
minutes. The supernatant was removed and protein concentration was determined
using the Bradford assay.
Table 1 The matched sera for 2-DE
| No. of matched-sera | Gender | Age | Histopathological diagnosis |
| M51Q-M51H | M | 59 | MDSCC |
| M88Q-M88H | F | 56 | MDSCC |
| M88Q-M88H | M | 62 | MDSCC |
| M92Q-M92H | M | 65 | MDSCC |
| M93Q-M93H | M | 65 | MDSCC |
| M141Q-Nor86 | F | 62 | MDSCC |
| M149Q-Nor67 | M | 67 | PDSCC |
| M151Q-Nor24 | M | 64 | MDSCC |
| M156Q-Nor87 | F | 70 | PDSCC |
| M160Q-Nor15 | M | 68 | MDSCC |
| M162Q-Nor34 | M | 72 | MDSCC |
| M168Q- Nor16 | M | 70 | MDSCC |
| M180Q- Nor66 | F | 65 | HDSCC |
| M180Q- Nor10 | F | 65 | HDSCC |
| M181Q- Nor97 | M | 57 | MDSCC |
| M192Q- Nor36 | M | 68 | MDSCC |
| M193Q- Nor19 | F | 66 | HDSCC |
The abbreviations used are: Q, pre-surgery; H, post-surgery; Nor, age and gender matched normal serum; MDSCC, moderate differentiated squamous Cell Carcinoma; PDSCC, poorly differentiated squamous Cell Carcinoma; HDSCC, Highly Differentiated squamous Cell Carcinoma.
Reagents
Electrophoresis reagents including acrylamide solution (40 %), N, N-methylenebisacrylamide,
N, N, N? N?tetramethylethylenediamine, tris base, glycine, SDS, DTT, CHAPS,
Immobiline Drystrips, IPG buffer, IPG cover fluid, LMW protein marker were from
Amersham Pharmacia Biotechnology Inc. (Uppsala, Sweden); Iodoacetamide was from
Acros (New Jersey, USA); Sequence grade Trypsin was from Washington Biochemical
Corporation; Trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) was from Fluka (Switzerland); TrizolTM
Reagent and Transcriptase SuperScript IITM were from Gibco BRL; PVDF
membrane was from Bio-Rad; Taq DNA polymerase and dNTPs were from TaKaRa; All
other reagents were of analytical grade.
Analytical 2-DE
All sera or cell lysates were
quantitated by Bradford assay. 2-DE was performed by standard procedures as
described[8,12] using precast IPG strips (pH3-10 linear, 18 cm, Amersham
Pharmacia Biotechnology Inc.) in the first dimension, isoelectric focusing (IEF).
Briefly, 180 mg proteins were diluted to a total volume of 350 ml with the
buffer [8 M urea, 2 % CHAPS, 0.5 % IPG buffer 3-10, 20 mM DTT and a trace of
bromophenol blue]. After loaded on IPG strips, IEF was carried out according to
the following protocol: 6 hours of rehydration at 0 V; 6 hours at 30 V; 1 hour
at 500 V; 1 hour at 1 000 V and 5 hours at 8 000 V. The current was limited to
50 mA per gel. After IEF separation, the strips were immediately equilibrated 2×15 min with equilibration solution [50
mM Tris-HCl, pH6.8, 6 M urea, 30 % glycerol and 2 % SDS]. 20 mM DTT was included
in the first equilibration solution, and 2 % (w/v) iodoacetamide was added in
the second equilibration step to alkylate thiols. SDS-polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis (PAGE) was performed using 1 mm thick, 13 % SDS-PAGE gels. The
strips were held in place with 0.5 % agarose dissolved in SDS/Tris running
buffer and electrophoresis was carried out at constant power (2.5 W/gel for 40
min and 15 W/gel for 6 hours) and temperature (20 ℃)
using Ettan Dalt II system (Amersham Pharmacia Biotechnology Inc.). Gels were
stained with silver nitrate according to the instructions of the silver-staining
kit (Amersham Pharmacia Biotechnology Inc.).
Gel scanning and image analysis
Silver stained 2-DE gels were
scanned with ImageScanner and analyzed including spots detection, quantification
and normalization with ImageMaster 2D Elite 3.10 (Amersham Pharmacia
Biotechnology Inc.). Statistical analysis was performed using SPSS statistical
software late.
In-gel protein digestion
Individual protein spot was excised
from the gel by Ettan Spot Picker (Amersham Pharmacia Biotechnology Inc.),
destained with the solution [15 mM potassium ferricyanide, 50 mM sodium
thiosulfate] and washed till opaque and colorless with 25 mM ammonium
bicarbonate/50 % acetonitrile. After dried with vacuum concentrator (SpeedVac
Plus, USA) the gel was rehydrated with 3-10 ml trypsin solution (10 ng/ml) at 4 ℃
for 30 min and then incubated at 37 ℃
overnight. Tryptic peptides were eluted and dried on SpeedVac vacuum
concentrator.
Protein identification by MALDI
mass spectrometry
Digested peptides were dissolved
with 0.5 % TFA, with saturated CHCA solution in 0.1 % TFA/50 % acetic acid as
matrix and analyzed by M@LDI R (Micromass, Manchester, UK). Spectrum acquisition
was externally calibrated with lock mass 2465.199 Da and internally calibrated
with autodigested peaks of trypsin (MH+: 2211.105 Da). The protein
identification was performed by searching protein databases of Swiss-prot/trEMBL
(http://www.expasy.ch/tools/peptident.html) and Mascot (http://www.matrixscience.com/).
The error for peptide mass was set as 50 ppm and possible missed cleavage of
trypsin was set as 1. The proteins with more than 4 matched peptides were
thought significant.
RT-PCR
Total RNAs were isolated from
esophageal cancer tissues using TRIzol reagent (Gibco BRL) according to the
manufactures?instructions. First strand cDNA was reversely transcribed from 5 mg
total RNAs using SuperScript II kit (Life
Technologies) at 42 ℃
for 50 min. Clusterin was amplified by the primers (left: 5'CCTCACGCAAGGCGAAGAC3'
right: 5'CTCACTCCTCCCGGTGCTT3'
and a product with 232bp was generated.
Western blot
Total cells or tissues were lysated
with the buffer [1 % SDS, 10 Mm Tris-Cl, pH 7.6, 20 mg/ml
aprotenin, 20 mg/ml
leupeptin and 1 mM AEBSF]. The protein concentrations were determined using
Bradford method. Five micrograms of protein were separated on 12 % of SDS-PAGE
gels and transferred to PVDF membranes. After blocked with 10 % non-fat milk,
the membranes were incubated with anti-clusterin monoclonal antibody (Santa Cruz
Bitechnology Inc.) (1:1 000 dilution) at 4 ℃
overnight. After washing for three times the membranes were incubated with
rabbit anti-mouse IgG at room temperature for 1 hour. The signals were developed
with the ECL kit (Amersham Pharmacia Biotechnology Inc.) and using anti-a-tubulin
antibody (Santa Cruz Biotechnology Inc.) as an internal control.
RESULTS
Clusterin was identified down-regulated
in pre-surgery serum
A proteomic approach was used
to determine the differentiated proteins profiling between the pre-surgery and
post-surgery sera of ESCC. The proteins from five pairs of matched sera from
pre- and post-surgery of ESCC patients were separated by 2DE. Figure 1
illustrates the proteomic profilings of the pre- and post-surgery sera from same
individual and more than 600 proteins and polypeptides were detected on each
gel. The matched rate of the five pairs gel was more than 87.2 % and the spots
localized in pI 3-10 with the molecular mass range around 20-200 kDa. All the
identified spots can be considered as abundant proteins since they are
detectable with Coomassie Blue staining on the preparative 2-DE gel. After
computer analysis for spots detection, background subtraction and volume
normalization, we were able to identify 20 spots (corresponding to 5 different
proteins) from the tryptic digestion via MALDI-TOF-MS analysis. The isoforms of
clusterin were identified from 8 spots as multipeptides components, which were
dramatically down-regulated in tumor sera (Figure 2 A and Figure 3).
Figure 1 (PDF) 2-DE profiles of the pre- and post-surgery matched esophageal cancer sera from a same individual. One hundred and eighty microgram of protein was separated by 2-DE (IEF at pH 3-10, 13 % of SDS-PAGE) and stained by silver staining. LMW markers were from Amersham Pharmacia. (A) pre-surgery serum, (B) matched post-surgery serum.
Proteomic determination of
esophageal cancer serum
We asked the question whether
the loss of clusterin was induced by surgical attacks? In order to get rid of
the interferences of the human immunoresponse after routine surgery, we
additionally selected and matched 12 pairs of pre-surgery sera with the healthy
sera from the same age and gender individuals who had no any surgical attacks
and infections recently. We ran 2-DE profiling again between the two groups.
Comparison with the healthy reference sera, clusterin proteins were also
identified as more than four times lower in esophageal cancer serum after
statistical analysis (Figure 2B).
Figure
2 (PDF) Representative regions
of 2-DE patterns of more matched esophageal cancer sera. One hundred and eighty
microgram of protein was separated by 2-DE (IEF at pH 3-10, SDS-PAGE 13 %) and
stained by silver staining. LMW markers were from Amersham Pharmacia. (A)
pre-surgery sera vs post-surgery sera, (B) pre-surgery sera vs normal
control sera.
Figure
3 (PDF)
The spectra of MALDI-TOF-MS obtained from one of the differentiated polypeptide
spots matched with the tryptic peptide sequences of clusterin (characters in
red).
Figure
4 (PDF) (A) Western blot analysis of
clusterin proteins expressed in patient-matched normal and tumor epithelium; (B)
Western blot analysis of clusterin proteins expressed in two kinds of esophageal
squamous cell carcinoma, EC0156 and EC0132. Alpha-tubulin was used as a loading
control. (C) Expression analysis of clusterin in patient-matched esophageal
cancer tissues by semi-quantitative RT-PCR. GAPDH was used as an internal
control.x
Loss of clusterin in tumor
epithelium
Immunoblot analysis of
clusterin expressed in patient-matched normal and tumor epithelium from
different ESCC individuals, whose sera had been found with low level of
clusterin was performed. Using a commercially available antibody, clusterin has
also been found down-regulated at different ESCC tissues (20/24), but absent in
two kinds of cell lines of esophageal squamous cell carcinoma, EC1 and EC2
(Figure 4A, B). At the transcriptional level, clusterin was also found
lower-expressed in 88 % of esophageal cancer tissues (22/25) by
semi-quantitative RT-PCR (Figure 4C). The findings of tumor tissue and cell
lines were consistent with the findings of ESCC serum.
DISCUSSION
To identify the differentially
secreted proteins or polypeptides associated with tumorigenesis of esophageal
squamous cell carcinoma, we carried out differentially proteomic analysis of
human serum in two groups. First we compared the pre- and post-surgery sera of
ESCC patient to identify the differentiated proteins from the same individuals.
Second, the sera from the disease (pre-surgery) and age- and gender-matched
healthy populations (normal control) had been analyzed through 2DE-MS strategy.
There were 3 protein spots quantitatively changed between the two groups and
were identified as clusterin, which was completely loss or dramatically
down-regulated in pre-surgery serum of esophageal cancer compared with the
post-surgery and the healthy controls. In addition, clusterin was also lost or
decreased in tumor cell lines and tissues. Clusterin has never been known to be
associated with esophageal cancer. This study reports identified clusterin as a
candidate protein of a tumor-associated serum marker in esophageal squamous cell
carcinoma via proteomic approaches for the first time.
Clusterin, so-called the
testosterone-repressed prostate message-2[13], sulfated glycoprotein
2, complement-associated protein SP-40, complement cytolysis inhibitor, a 80 kDa
heterodimeric highly conserved secreted glycoprotein expressed in a wide variety
of tissues and was found in all human fluids. It responses to a number of
diverse stimuli, including hormone ablation and has been attributed functions in
several diverse physiological processes such as sperm maturation, lipid
transportation, complement inhibition, tissue remodeling, membrane recycling,
cell adhesion and cell-substratum interactions, stabilization of stressed
proteins in a folding-competent state and promotion or inhibition of apoptosis[14-16].
Clusterin gene is
differentially regulated by cytokines, growth factors and stress- inducing
agents, while another defining prominent and intriguing clusterin feature is its
upregulation in many severe physiological disturbances states and in several
neurodegenerative conditions mostly related to advanced aging[17-22].
Active cell death (ACD) in hormone-dependent tissues such as the prostate and
mammary gland is readily induced by hormone ablation and by treatment with
anti-androgens or anti-estrogens, calcium channel agonists and TGF beta[23].
Clusterin has been found up-regulated in several cases of in vivo cancer
progression and tumor formation such as human prostate carcinomas[18,24],
renal cell carcinoma (RCC)[25,26], breast carcinoma[17],
ovarian cancer[22], glioblastoma, testicular tumor cells, the normal
and cancerous endometrium, hemangioma[21], anaplastic large-cell
lymphomas[20], transitional cell carcinoma (TCC) of the bladder[27],
as well as hepatoma cells. Clusterin, on the other hand, is a
membrane-stabilizing protein that appears to be involved in limiting the
autophagic lysis of epithelial cells during apoptosis. Recent studies have shown
the clusterin expression mediates antiapoptotic activity against a wide variety
of stimuli[28] and using antisense oligonucleotides of clusterin,
also could enhance androgen sensitivity and chemosensitivity in prostate cancer
therapy[29]. On the other hand, it has recently been shown that
decreased synthesis and delayed processing of clusterin in testicular germ cell
tumors, colorectal cancer[16,30] and human polycystic kidneys cells[31,32].
However, there is no definitive biochemical evidence to support a specific
function for clusterin except for its role in the modulation of the immune
system and the functional roles of clusterin are still enigmatic.
A robust antigen capture assay
for the measurement of serum clusterin concentrations has been developed and
validated for increased clusterin expression, and alterations in serum clusterin
levels associated with a number of disease states[33]. Whether the
decrease of clusterin in pre-surgery serum is a predictor of ESCC progression
and prognosis, still need more efforts to address and the molecular mechanisms
of clusterin implicated in tumorigenesis needs to be elucidated.
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Edited by Ren SY