The subcellular distribution of phosphorylated Y-box-binding protein-1 at S102 in colorectal cancer patients, stratified by KRAS mutational status and clinicopathological features.
IF 6.6 2区 医学Q1 Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Konstanze Lettau, Stephan Forchhammer, Birgit Fehrenbacher, Lejla Mahmutovic, Marcus Scharpf, Gunnar Blumenstock, Martin Schaller, Irina Bonzheim, Shayan Khozooei, Mahmoud Toulany
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Oncoprotein Y-box-binding protein-1 (YB-1) is involved in all cancer hallmarks. One of the most studied post-translational modifications of YB-1 is phosphorylation on Serine 102 (S102), which is involved in cancer progression. KRAS mutations are frequent, have been associated with poor prognosis and therapy resistance, and they are considered a major stimulator of S102 YB-1 in vitro. In this study, a relationship between S102 YB-1 phosphorylation in subcellular fractions and KRAS mutation was investigated in CRC tissues, and its association with clinicopathological parameters was analyzed. Immunohistochemistry on 36 patient samples and 5 normal tissue samples highlighted nuclear S102 YB-1 was specific to cancer tissues. Nuclear S102 YB-1 was expressed in 47.2% of tumor tissues, which was positively correlated with KRAS mutation (P = 0.017). There was no significant association between cytoplasmic S102 YB-1 with KRAS mutation status (P = 0.391). Further studies in larger cohorts are needed to validate the observed results. The significant association between S102 YB-1 in the nucleus and KRAS mutation may suggest YB-1 as an effective target to improve survival of CRC patients with KRAS-mutated tumors.
Molecular OncologyBiochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology-Molecular Medicine
CiteScore
11.80
自引率
1.50%
发文量
203
审稿时长
10 weeks
期刊介绍:
Molecular Oncology highlights new discoveries, approaches, and technical developments, in basic, clinical and discovery-driven translational cancer research. It publishes research articles, reviews (by invitation only), and timely science policy articles.
The journal is now fully Open Access with all articles published over the past 10 years freely available.