Abstract

S100A2 gene products were shown to be frequently and dramatically over-represented in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) lesions over normal tissue by microarray analysis. We have now analysed an independent series of NSCLC tumours and multiple matched normal bronchial epithelial sites by RT–PCR and immunohistochemistry to investigate: whether this expression pattern can be confirmed and whether elevated expression is associated with tumour histology, clinical outcome or preneoplasia. In this second series, S100A2 was strongly expressed in 76% (35 out of 46) of tumours, more frequently in squamous cell than adenocarcinomas (P<0.002). This strong expression was not related to high-level gene amplification, but was associated in one of five informative cases with an allele-specific imbalance in transcript levels. Most tumours strongly expressed the ΔNp63 transcript, the product of which is a putative regulator of S100A2 transcription and while all but one of the tumours positive for ΔNp63 expressed S100A2, others negative for this regulator also expressed the gene. Contrary to the hypothesis that S100A2 is a tumour suppressor, no somatic mutations were identified in the coding sequence in 44 tumours. Furthermore, an examination of multiple tumour-free epithelial sites from 20 patients showed that strong expression was often associated with increasing levels of disorder in preinvasive bronchial lesions (P<0.0001).

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