Reduced metastasis-suppressor gene mRNA-expression in breast cancer brain metastases.
Stark. Andreas M AM; Tongers. Kerrin K; Maass. Nicolai N; Mehdorn. H Maximilian HM; Held-Feindt. Janka J
Key Findings
- KISS1 mRNA levels are dramatically reduced (ā10Ć) in breast cancer brain metastases.
- Other metastasisāsuppressor genes (Nm23, KAI1, BRMS1, Mkk4) are also lowered in these metastases.
- Protein staining confirmed that the gene products are present but at reduced levels.
Practical Outcomes
- For now, the study is mostly descriptive and does not provide a direct protocol for biohackers. It suggests that therapies aimed at increasing KISS1 activity might help prevent or treat brain metastases, but more research is needed before any actionable steps can be taken.
Summary
Researchers found that breast cancer cells that spread to the brain have much lower levels of the gene KISS1 (and several other metastasisāsuppressor genes) compared to the original tumor. This drop is about tenāfold and could be part of why these cancers become more aggressive in the brain.
Abstract
Brain metastases are an increasingly common complication in breast cancer patients. The Metastasis Suppressor Genes (MSG) Nm23, KISS1, KAI1, BRMS1, and Mkk4 have been associated with the metastatic potential of breast cancer in vitro and in vivo. The mRNA expression of Nm23, KISS1, KAI1, BRMS1, and Mkk4 in fresh frozen tissue samples of brain metastases from ductal invasive breast cancer specimens was examined in relation to primary tumors. In a first step, mRNA expression screening was carried out using a semi-quantitative RT-PCR approach, in a second step quantitative real-time RT-PCR was performed on selected specimens. By immunohistochemical staining, gene products were visualized on the protein level. Semi-quantitative RT-PCR revealed reduced mRNA expression of Nm23, KISS1, KAI1, BRMS, and Mkk4 in brain metastases. Results for KISS1, KAI1, BRMS, and Mkk4 were confirmed by real-time RT-PCR. In detail, mRNA expression reduction in breast cancer brain metastases was tenfold. Expression of MSG could be confirmed by immunohistochemical staining on protein level. Our investigations revealed significantly reduced mRNA expression of metastases suppressor genes KISS1, KAI1, BRMS1, and Mkk4 in breast cancer brain metastasis. Particularly, in the case of KISS1 and Mkk4, an important role for future treatment of patients with breast cancer brain metastatic lesions can be assumed.
Study Information
pubmed
2004
2004-12-08T00:00:00.000Z
10.1007/s00432-004-0629-9
149
52