Abstract

BackgroundTumor metastasis and changes in host immunosurveillance are important components in cancer development. Tumor cell invasion into the bloodstream is an essential step for systemic metastasis. Currently, the detection of tumor cells in the circulation is mainly dependent upon the utilization of known epithelial cell markers. However, expression of these molecules is not limited to cancer patients; healthy people also have a small number of epithelial cells in their circulation. Utilizing these markers to detect circulating tumor cells (CTCs) cannot adequately explain the mechanisms of tumor cell survival or their development of metastatic potential in peripheral blood. The immune system can also evolve along with the cancer, actually promoting or selecting the outgrowth of tumor variants. Unfortunately, both metastasis and immunosurveillance remain mysterious and are debatable because we have yet to define the molecules that participate in these processes. We are interested in identifying the existence of expressed genes, or mRNA species, that are specifically associated with circulating cells of cancer-bearing patients using prostate cancer (PCa) as a model.ResultsWe established two comprehensive subtracted cDNA libraries using a molecular technique called suppression subtractive hybridization. This technique selectively amplifies transcripts that are specifically expressed in circulating cells of either PCa patients or healthy men. Following sequencing reaction, we showed that 17 out of 23 (73.9%) sequenced clones did not match any mRNAs in the GenBank database. This result suggests that genes associated with alterations in circulating cells of cancer-bearing patients are largely unknown. Semi-quantitative RT-PCR confirmed that two genes are up-regulated in circulating cells of PCa patients, whereas another two genes are down-regulated in the same patients.ConclusionThe comprehensive gene expression analysis is capable of identifying differentially expressed genes in circulating cells of healthy men and PCa patients. We did not attempt to enrich specific cell types in this study because phenotypes of CTCs and subsets of leukocytes participating in immunosurveillance remain largely unknown. Continuous studies of these differentially expressed genes will eventually lead us to understand the mechanisms involved in tumor metastasis and immune modulation during cancer development.

Highlights

  • Tumor metastasis and changes in host immunosurveillance are important components in cancer development

  • Current protocols for detecting circulating tumor cells (CTCs) mainly utilize known epithelial cell markers or other tissue-specific molecules [26]. The presence of these markers in CTCs does not correlate with their survival in the circulation and their metastatic capability

  • The suppressive hybridization (SSH) libraries were constructed from two age- and race-matched, pooled sample populations, healthy men and prostate cancer (PCa) patients

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Summary

Introduction

Tumor metastasis and changes in host immunosurveillance are important components in cancer development. The detection of tumor cells in the circulation is mainly dependent upon the utilization of known epithelial cell markers Expression of these molecules is not limited to cancer patients; healthy people have a small number of epithelial cells in their circulation. Utilizing these markers to detect circulating tumor cells (CTCs) cannot adequately explain the mechanisms of tumor cell survival or their development of metastatic potential in peripheral blood. Metastasis is a sequential, multi-step process in which tumor cells detach from the primary tumor, migrate through the basement membrane and extracellular matrix, and invade the lymphatic and/or blood systems [1]. The use of these markers to detect CTCs fails to explain mechanisms that regulate tumor cell survival in the circulation and the development of their metastatic capability

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