Abstract

Cancerous inhibitor of protein phosphatase 2A (CIP2A) is an oncogenic factor stabilizing c-MYC protein and driving cellular transformation. We determine whether CIP2A expression can serve as marker for gastric cancer and investigate the mechanism underlying CIP2A-mediated transformation and cell proliferation. Normal and malignant gastric tissues derived from 37 patients with gastric cancer were analyzed for CIP2A expression using reverse transcription-PCR and immunohistochemical staining. Gastric and other cell lines with different p53 and pRB backgrounds were used to inhibit CIP2A expression using small interfering RNA and then examined for clonogenic potentials, senescence, or differentiation. CIP2A mRNA was present in 34 of 37 (90%) of tumor specimens but absent in 27 of 37 (73%) of matched normal gastric mucosa. In 10 adjacent normal tissues with detectable CIP2A mRNA, 6 of them exhibited much weaker levels of CIP2A compared with their corresponding tumors. Thus, a total of 32 (87%) gastric cancer samples overexpressed CIP2A. CIP2A protein expression was readily detectable in the tumor tissues but absent in normal gastric mucosa. Depleting CIP2A expression substantially inhibited growth and clonogenic capabilities of tumor cell lines independently of p53 and pRB pathways. Gastric cancer-derived AGS cells underwent senescence following the inhibition of CIP2A expression. Moreover, CIP2A depletion triggered partial differentiation of leukemic HL60 cells. CIP2A in tumor cells is required for sustained proliferation by preventing cell growth arrest, senescence, or differentiation and its expression is significantly (P < 0.001) discriminatory between normal and cancerous gastric tissue.

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