Nuclear LEF1/TCF4 correlate with poor prognosis but not with nuclear beta-catenin in cerebral metastasis of lung adenocarcinomas

2013 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Nuclear LEF1/TCF4 correlate with poor prognosis but not with nuclear beta-catenin in cerebral metastasis of lung adenocarcinomas​
Bleckmann, A. ; Siam, L.; Klemm, F. ; Rietkoetter, E.; Wegner, C. ; Kramer, F.-J.   & Beißbarth, T.  et al.​ (2013) 
Clinical & Experimental Metastasis30(4) pp. 471​-482​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10585-012-9552-7 

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Authors
Bleckmann, Annalen ; Siam, Laila; Klemm, Florian ; Rietkoetter, Eva; Wegner, Christiane ; Kramer, Franz-Josef ; Beißbarth, Tim ; Binder, Claudia ; Stadelmann, Chr. ; Pukrop, Tobias 
Abstract
An essential function of the transcription factors LEF1/TCF4 in cerebral metastases of lung adenocarcinomas has been described in mouse models, suggesting a WNT/beta-catenin effect as potential mechanism. Their role in humans is still unclear, thus we analyzed LEF1, TCF4, beta-catenin, and early stage prognostic markers in 25 adenocarcinoma brain metastases using immunohistochemistry (IHC). IHC revealed nuclear TCF4 in all adenocarcinoma samples, whereas only 36 % depicted nuclear LEF1 and nuclear beta-catenin signals. Samples with nuclear LEF1 as well as high TCF4 (++++) expression were associated with a shorter survival (p = 0.01, HR = 6.68), while nuclear beta-catenin had no significant impact on prognosis and did not significantly correlate with nuclear LEF1. High proliferation index Ki67 was associated with shorter survival in late-stage disease (p = 0.03, HR 3.27). Additionally, we generated a LEF1/TCF4 as well as an AXIN2 signature, the latter as representative of WNT/beta-catenin activity, following a bioinformatics approach with a gene expression dataset of cerebral metastases in lung adenocarcinoma. To analyze the prognostic relevance in primary lung adenocarcinomas, we applied both signatures to a microarray dataset of 58 primary lung adenocarcinomas. Only the LEF1/TCF4 signature was able to separate clusters with impact on survival (p = 0.01, HR = 0.32). These clusters displayed diverging enrichment patterns of the cell cycle pathway. In conclusion, our data show that LEF1/TCF4, but not beta-catenin, have prognostic relevance in primary and cerebrally metastasized human lung adenocarcinomas. In contrast to the previous in vivo findings, these results indicate that LEF1/TCF4 act independently of beta-catenin in this setting.
Issue Date
2013
Status
published
Publisher
Springer
Journal
Clinical & Experimental Metastasis 
ISSN
1573-7276; 0262-0898

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