Mesalamine suppresses the expression of TC22, a novel tropomyosin isoform associated with colonic neoplasia. Das, KK; Bajpai, M; Kong, Y; Liu, J; Geng, X; Das, KM Molecular pharmacology
76
183-91
2009
Show Abstract
Although a protective role for mesalamine against colon cancer in ulcerative colitis has been shown epidemiologically, its molecular mechanism is unknown. We cloned and sequenced a novel human tropomyosin (hTM) isoform, TC22, which is an alternatively spliced variant of normal epithelial hTM isoform 5 (hTM5), identical apart from 25 C-terminal amino acids. TC22 is expressed in 100% of colorectal carcinoma but is not expressed in normal colon epithelial cells. To explore a molecular mechanism of chemoprevention, we examined the effect of mesalamine on TC22 expression using LS180 colon cancer cells. Expression of hTM5 and TC22 was investigated at the protein and gene levels by fluorescence-activated cell sorting and real-time reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction. Small interference RNA (siRNA) against the TC22 variant were transfected into LS180 colon cancer cells, reducing protein and transcript levels by 45 to 50%. Mesalamine or sulfasalazine (2 mM), but not sulfapyridine, significantly (p < 0.02-0.006) reduced the expression of the TC22 transcript and significantly (p < 0.05 to <0.0002) reduced the expression of TC22 protein in a dose-dependent and reversible manner. Rosiglitazone, a specific peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma (PPARgamma) agonist, similarly and significantly (p < 0.002) reduced TC22 protein expression. A polymerase chain reaction array of 84 cancer-related genes performed on TC22 siRNA-transfected cells demonstrated a significant (more than two times) change in targets involved in apoptosis, adhesion, angiogenesis, and tissue remodeling. We conclude that mesalamine, sulfasalazine, and rosiglitazone significantly reduced the cellular expression of TC22, implicating PPARgamma in this modulation. Similar suppression of TC22 by siRNA produced gene level changes on several critical carcinogenic pathways. These findings suggest a novel antineoplastic molecular effect of mesalamine. | 19369484
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Effect of eradication of Helicobacter pylori on the histology and cellular phenotype of gastric intestinal metaplasia. Watari, J; Das, KK; Amenta, PS; Tanabe, H; Tanaka, A; Geng, X; Lin, JJ; Kohgo, Y; Das, KM Clinical gastroenterology and hepatology : the official clinical practice journal of the American Gastroenterological Association
6
409-17
2008
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Eradication of Helicobacter pylori appears to reduce gastric cancer incidence. We examined the effect of successful H pylori therapy on histology, phenotype of gastric intestinal metaplasia (GIM) (complete vs incomplete), and expression of several biomarkers related to carcinogenesis.Ninety-six H pylori-positive patients from Japan were treated successfully and followed up prospectively over 4 years with yearly endoscopy and were classified into 3 groups: group CG, chronic gastritis without GIM (n = 36); group IM, chronic gastritis with GIM (n = 33); group DYS, and GIM with dysplasia/cancer in a different location of the stomach (n = 27). A total of 288 endoscopic procedures were performed. Histology, mucin-histochemistry, and immunoperoxidase assays using monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) for cell phenotype (monoclonal antibody Das-1/colonic) and for neoplasia (TC22 and p53) were performed.The GIM histologic score was higher in group DYS than in group IM (P < .05) and group CG (P < .0001). The GIM scores did not change in groups IM and DYS over 4 years. mAb Das-1 reactivity was higher in group DYS (63%) than in group IM (39%) and group GC (0%). After eradication of H pylori, mAb Das-1 reactivity disappeared in 40% of patients (P < .0001) despite the unchanged GIM scores, and regression of TC22-4 was noted in the same patients.H pylori eradication does not reduce the histologic GIM score, but changes the cellular phenotype of GIM. This change of phenotype may be an important factor in the reduction of cancer incidence after eradication of H pylori. | 18321787
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Isolation and sequencing of a novel tropomyosin isoform preferentially associated with colon cancer. Lin, JL; Geng, X; Bhattacharya, SD; Yu, JR; Reiter, RS; Sastri, B; Glazier, KD; Mirza, ZK; Wang, KK; Amenta, PS; Das, KM; Lin, JJ Gastroenterology
123
152-62
2002
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Nonmuscle human tropomyosin (hTM) isoforms have distinct functions and may play important roles in various disease processes.In an attempt to identify colon epithelial tropomyosin isoform, a complementary DNA library prepared from a human colon cancer cell line T84 was screened by an oligonucleotide probe complementary to messages of all known hTM isoforms. A novel clone called TC22 was obtained. The amino acid sequence of TC22 isoform is identical to isoform 5 (hTM5) apart from the C terminal domain, amino acids 222-247 coding the exon 9.Northern blot analysis showed that TC22 message is expressed in transformed epithelial cell lines and tumor tissues but not in normal epithelial cells. We developed a monoclonal antibody specific to TC22 isoform (TC22-4). By Western blot and immunoperoxidase assays, we analyzed 105 colonic specimens (fresh frozen and formalin fixed) from 96 patients with colon polyps (hyperplastic) or adenomas with or without dysplasia and cancer. Twenty-one of 22 (95%) of colon cancer specimens showed the presence of TC22, compared with only 1 of the 17 normal colon specimens and none of the 13 hyperplastic polyps (P < 0.0001). As assayed by immunoperoxidase staining, TC22 expression progressively increased in benign adenomatous polyps (35%) and polyps with mild and severe dysplasia (57% and 100%, respectively).We cloned and sequenced a novel hTM isoform, TC22, which is strongly associated with colonic neoplasia and carcinoma. TC22 may provide a useful biomarker for surveillance of colon cancer. | 12105844
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