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Metastasis regulation by PPARD expression in cancer cells
Xiangsheng Zuo, … , Anil K. Sood, Imad Shureiqi
Xiangsheng Zuo, … , Anil K. Sood, Imad Shureiqi
Published January 12, 2017
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2017;2(1):e91419. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.91419.
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Research Article Oncology

Metastasis regulation by PPARD expression in cancer cells

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Abstract

Peroxisome proliferator–activated receptor–δ (PPARD) is upregulated in many major human cancers, but the role that its expression in cancer cells has in metastasis remains poorly understood. Here, we show that specific PPARD downregulation or genetic deletion of PPARD in cancer cells significantly repressed metastasis in various cancer models in vivo. Mechanistically, PPARD promoted angiogenesis via interleukin 8 in vivo and in vitro. Analysis of transcriptome profiling of HCT116 colon cancer cells with or without genetic deletion of PPARD and gene expression patterns in The Cancer Genome Atlas colorectal adenocarcinoma database identified novel pro-metastatic genes (GJA1, VIM, SPARC, STC1, SNCG) as PPARD targets. PPARD expression in cancer cells drastically affected epithelial-mesenchymal transition, migration, and invasion, further underscoring its necessity for metastasis. Clinically, high PPARD expression in various major human cancers (e.g., colorectal, lung, breast) was associated with significantly reduced metastasis-free survival. Our results demonstrate that PPARD, a druggable protein, is an important molecular target in metastatic cancer.

Authors

Xiangsheng Zuo, Weiguo Xu, Min Xu, Rui Tian, Micheline J. Moussalli, Fei Mao, Xiaofeng Zheng, Jing Wang, Jeffrey S. Morris, Mihai Gagea, Cathy Eng, Scott Kopetz, Dipen M. Maru, Asif Rashid, Russell Broaddus, Daoyan Wei, Mien-Chie Hung, Anil K. Sood, Imad Shureiqi

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Figure 12

PPARD is upregulated in human colorectal cancer and negatively correlated with cancer patient survival.

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PPARD is upregulated in human colorectal cancer and negatively correlate...
(A) The PPARD mRNA expression levels in cancerous mucosa samples from colon cancer patients who developed metastasis (n = 10) are significantly higher than those from the patients who did not develop metastasis (n = 12). (B–D) PPARD protein expression, as measured by IHC staining, in 152 colon cancer patients treated at the MD Anderson Cancer Center between 2001 and 2009. (B) Total composite expression scores (CESs) for IHC staining of PPARD in the nuclei and cytoplasm of normal and paired colorectal tumor tissues (n = 66). (C) Separated CESs for IHC staining of PPARD in the nuclei and cytoplasm of normal and paired colorectal tumor tissues (n = 66 for normal and n = 152 for tumor samples). Values for A–C are medians with interquartile ranges. *P < 0.01; ***P < 0.0001 (unpaired [A] or paired [B and C] t test). (D) Representative photographs of IHC staining of PPARD in normal and tumor colorectal tissues. Scale bars: upper (1 mm); lower (100 μm). (E) Kaplan-Meier estimates of distant metastasis–free survival as a function of high versus low PPARD expression in tumors from patients with stage III colorectal cancer in the cohort described in B–D. (F–H) Kaplan-Meier estimates of distant metastasis–free survival as a function of high versus low PPARD expression in tumors from 2 cohorts of breast cancer patients (F and G) and 1 cohort of liposarcoma patients (H) based on analyses of data in the PrognoScan database. Corrected P values are shown.

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