miércoles, 9 de octubre de 2013

Cell–cell adhesion genes CTNNA2 and CTNNA3 are tumour suppressors frequently mutated in laryngeal carcinomas : Nature Communications : Nature Publishing Group

Cell–cell adhesion genes CTNNA2 and CTNNA3 are tumour suppressors frequently mutated in laryngeal carcinomas : Nature Communications : Nature Publishing Group

Cell–cell adhesion genes CTNNA2 and CTNNA3 are tumour suppressors frequently mutated in laryngeal carcinomas

Nature Communications
4,
Article number:
2531
doi:10.1038/ncomms3531
Received
Accepted
Published

Abstract

Laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma is a frequent and significant cause of morbidity and mortality. Here we explore the biological basis of this aggressive tumour, and identify two cell–cell adhesion genes as recurrently mutated in this malignancy. We first perform exome sequencing of four laryngeal carcinomas and their matched normal tissues. Among the 569 genes found to present somatic mutations, and based on their recurrence or functional relevance in cancer, we select 40 for further validation in 86 additional laryngeal carcinomas. We detect frequent mutations (14 of 90, 15%) in CTNNA2 and CTNNA3-encoding α-catenins. Functional studies reveal an increase in the migration and invasive ability of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma cells producing mutated forms of CTNNA2 and CTNNA3 or in cells where both α-catenins are silenced. Analysis of the clinical relevance of these mutations demonstrates that they are associated with poor prognosis. We conclude that CTNNA2 and CTNNA3 are tumour suppressor genes frequently mutated in laryngeal carcinomas.

At a glance

Figures

left
  1. Mutational profile of whole-exome-sequenced samples from patients with laryngeal carcinoma.
    Figure 1
  2. CTNNA2 and CTNNA3 mutations identified in laryngeal carcinomas.
    Figure 2
  3. Adhesion profile and migration of SCC-2 cells after silencing or overexpression of CTNNA2 and CTNNA3.
    Figure 3
  4. Cellular features and β-catenin transcriptional activity of SCC-40 cells after silencing of CTNNA2 and CTNNA3.

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