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Receptor-Independent Ectopic Activity of Prolactin Predicts Aggressive Lung Tumors and Indicates HDACi-Based Therapeutic Strategies.


ABSTRACT: Ectopic activation of tissue-specific genes accompanies malignant transformation in many cancers. Prolactin (PRL) aberrant activation in lung cancer was investigated here to highlight its value as a biomarker.PRL is ectopically activated in a subset of very aggressive lung tumors, associated with a rapid fatal outcome, in our cohort of 293 lung tumor patients and in an external independent series of patients. Surprisingly PRL receptor expression was not detected in the vast majority of PRL-expressing lung tumors. Additionally, the analysis of the PRL transcripts in lung tumors and cell lines revealed systematic truncations of their 5' regions, including the signal peptide-encoding portions. PRL expression was found to sustain cancer-specific gene expression circuits encompassing genes that are normally responsive to hypoxia. Interestingly, this analysis also indicated that histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors could counteract the PRL-associated transcriptional activity.Altogether, this work not only unravels a yet unknown oncogenic mechanism but also indicates that the specific category of PRL-expressing aggressive lung cancers could be particularly responsive to an HDAC inhibitor-based treatment.

SUBMITTER: Le Bescont A 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4492736 | biostudies-literature | 2015 Jul

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Receptor-Independent Ectopic Activity of Prolactin Predicts Aggressive Lung Tumors and Indicates HDACi-Based Therapeutic Strategies.

Le Bescont Aurore A   Vitte Anne-Laure AL   Debernardi Alexandra A   Curtet Sandrine S   Buchou Thierry T   Vayr Jessica J   de Reyniès Aurélien A   Ito Akihiro A   Guardiola Philippe P   Brambilla Christian C   Yoshida Minoru M   Brambilla Elisabeth E   Rousseaux Sophie S   Khochbin Saadi S  

Antioxidants & redox signaling 20140306 1


<h4>Aims</h4>Ectopic activation of tissue-specific genes accompanies malignant transformation in many cancers. Prolactin (PRL) aberrant activation in lung cancer was investigated here to highlight its value as a biomarker.<h4>Results</h4>PRL is ectopically activated in a subset of very aggressive lung tumors, associated with a rapid fatal outcome, in our cohort of 293 lung tumor patients and in an external independent series of patients. Surprisingly PRL receptor expression was not detected in t  ...[more]

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