Surgical tumour resection deregulates Hallmarks of Cancer in resected tissue and the surrounding microenvironment.


Journal

Molecular cancer research : MCR
ISSN: 1557-3125
Titre abrégé: Mol Cancer Res
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101150042

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
23 Feb 2024
Historique:
accepted: 20 02 2024
received: 13 04 2023
revised: 24 08 2023
medline: 23 2 2024
pubmed: 23 2 2024
entrez: 23 2 2024
Statut: aheadofprint

Résumé

Surgery exposes tumor tissue to severe hypoxia and mechanical stress leading to rapid gene expression changes in the tumor and its microenvironment, which remain poorly characterized. We biopsied tumor and adjacent normal tissue from breast (BRC) (n=81) and head/neck squamous cancer (HNSC) patients (n=10) at the beginning (A), during (B) and end of surgery (C). Tumor/normal RNA from 46/81 breast cancer patients was subjected to mRNA-Seq using Illumina short-read technology, and from nine HNSC patients to whole transcriptome microarray with Illumina BeadArray. Pathways and genes involved in 7 of 10 known cancer hallmarks, namely, tumour promoting inflammation (TNF-A, NFK-B, IL-18 pathways), activation of invasion & migration [(various Extracellular Matrix (ECM) related pathways, cell migration)], sustained proliferative signaling (K-Ras Signaling), evasion of growth suppressors (P53 signaling, regulation of cell death), deregulating cellular energetics (response to lipid, secreted factors, adipogenesis), inducing angiogenesis (hypoxia signaling, myogenesis), and avoiding immune destruction (CTLA4 and PDL1) were significantly deregulated during surgical resection (time-points A vs B vs C). These findings were validated using NanoString assays in independent pre/intra/post-operative breast cancer samples from 48 patients. In a comparison of gene expression data from biopsy (analogous to time-point A) with surgical resection samples (analogous to time-point C) from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) study, the top deregulated genes were the same as identified in our analysis, in five of the seven studied cancer types. This study suggests that surgical extirpation deregulates the hallmarks of cancer in primary tumors and adjacent normal tissue across different cancers. Implications: Surgery deregulates hallmarks of cancer in human tissue.

Identifiants

pubmed: 38394149
pii: 734900
doi: 10.1158/1541-7786.MCR-23-0265
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Auteurs

Rohan Chaubal (R)

Tata Memorial Hospital, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India.

Nilesh Gardi (N)

Tata Memorial Centre, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India.

Shalaka Joshi (S)

Tata Memorial Center, Parel Mumbai, Maharashtra, India.

Gouri Pantvaidya (G)

Tata Memorial Hospital, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India.

Rasika Kadam (R)

Tata Memorial Hospital, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India.

Vaibhav Vanmali (V)

Tata Memorial Hospital, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India.

Rohini Hawaldar (R)

Tata Memorial Hospital, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India.

Elizabeth Talker (E)

Tata Memorial Hospital, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India.

Jaya Chitra (J)

Tata Memorial Hospital, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India.

Poonam Gera (P)

ACTREC, Tata Memorial Centre, Navi Mumbai, India.

Dimple Bhatia (D)

ACTREC, Tata Memorial Centre, Navi Mumbai, India.

Prajakta Kalkar (P)

ACTREC, Tata Memorial Centre, Navi Mumbai, India.

Mamta Gurav (M)

Tata Memorial Hospital, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India.

Omshree Shetty (O)

Tata Memorial Hospital, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India.

Sangeeta Desai (S)

Tata Memorial Hospital, Mumbai, India.

Neeraja M Krishnan (NM)

Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, New Delhi, India.

Nita Nair (N)

Tata Memorial Hospital, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India.

Vani Parmar (V)

Tata Memorial Centre, Mumbai, India.

Amit Dutt (A)

Advanced Centre for Treatment, Research and Education In Cancer, Tata Memorial Centre, Navi Mumbai, Maharashtra, India.

Binay Panda (B)

Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India.

Sudeep Gupta (S)

Tata Memorial Hospital, Mumbai, India.

Rajendra Badwe (R)

Tata Memorial Hospital, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India.

Classifications MeSH