Project description:At present, medical treatments of synchronous and metachronous liver metastases from colorectal cancer are not differentiated. The aim of the study was to analyze the gene expression profiling of synchronous and metachronous lesions in order to identify molecular signatures as possible basis for choice of systemic therapies. Fresh tissues specimens from metastases of 18 patients undergone liver surgery were collected (10 synchronous and 8 metachronous lesions). Gene expression profiling was studied using Affymetrix platform. Two different profiles were identified. Pathway related to the Epidermal Growth Factor receptor (EGFr) was upregulated in metachronous lesions whereas pathways mainly related to inflammation in synchronous lesions. Real Time-PCR, Western Blotting and ELISA confirmed that the metachronous lesions had the overexpression of EGFr, but the synchronous ones had the overexpression of Cyclo-oxygenase 2 (COX-2). These results suggest that synchronous or metachronous liver metastases from colorectal cancer could be differently treated on the basis of different molecular pathways. Keywords: disease state analysis
Project description:Comparison of genomic alterations of primary colorectal cancers with liver metastases of the same patient Keywords: array CGH, colorectal cancer, colon cancer, liver metastasis 21 primary colorectal cancers and 21 matched liver metastases hybridized against sex-matched control pools
Project description:Comparison of expression profiles of primary colorectal cancers with liver metastases of the same patient. Additionally, expression data of normal colon and liver tissue. Abstract of publication will be included upon publication Keywords: expression profiling, colorectal cancer, colon cancer, liver metastasis, normal colonic tissue, normal liver tissue RNA of 18 primary colorectal cancers, 18 matched liver metastases, 7 normal colon epithelium samples and 5 normal liver tissue samples hybridized on Human Sentrix-6 V2 (Illumina)
Project description:Comparison of genomic alterations of primary colorectal cancers with liver metastases of the same patient Keywords: array CGH, colorectal cancer, colon cancer, liver metastasis
Project description:Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common and second most deadly cancer worldwide. Treatments for metastatic CRC (mCRC) are still largely based on toxic chemotherapy regimens, but important insights into tumor biology enabled the development of targeted cancer therapies. Here, we describe a proteogenomic analysis of CRC liver metastases (metastatic CRC, mCRC), an ideal setting to analyze therapeutic resistance which occurs in a short time frame. We selected liver metastases from two CRC patients on both of which we performed deep proteome profiling and WES and RNAseq-directed database searches, identifying 10 predicted muttaions, one of which was KRAS G12V. finding we generated targeted parallel reaction monitoring (PRM) assays using stable isotope labelled standard (SIS) peptides to quantify the actual concentration (fmol per µg of total protein) of the mutated and canonical (wildtype) protein variants for 8 different mutations. We demonstrate on a total of 8 tumor and 6 paired healthy tissue samples (7 and 6 out of these KRASG12V) that PRM allows quantifying the actual mutation rate on the protein level from as little 10 µg of total protein starting amount and within a single 1 hour nano-LC-MS/MS run.
Project description:Using liver metastases from 4 colorectal cancer patients (CRC-LM), we explored one receptor: EGFR whose signaling triggers cell proliferation and is exacerbated in many tumors.
Project description:Comparison of expression profiles of primary colorectal cancers with liver metastases of the same patient. Additionally, expression data of normal colon and liver tissue. Abstract of publication will be included upon publication Keywords: expression profiling, colorectal cancer, colon cancer, liver metastasis, normal colonic tissue, normal liver tissue
Project description:Almost half of all patients diagnosed with colorectal cancer develop liver metastases. The potential role of intra-individual metastatic heterogeneity remains poorly characterized. By high-resolution DNA copy number analyses and a novel approach based on pair-wise genetic distance, we examined the genetic heterogeneity among multiple liver metastatic deposits obtained from 45 patients subject to curative liver resection. We found large variation in intra-individual metastatic heterogeneity. A high level of heterogeneity was associated with poor patient survival. Patients with metachronous metastases who received chemotherapy had significantly more heterogeneity than chemonaïve patients.