Abstract

Simple SummaryThe metabolic protein TXNIP plays a crucial role in various cellular processes. Abnormal TXNIP levels are notable, e.g., in type II diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, and tumors. Using immunohistochemical staining for TXNIP in different tumor entities, we give new insights of TXNIP expression on the protein level. In human tumors, staining intensity inversely correlated with aggressiveness of the tumor entity. In contrast, human tumor cell lines grown in mice (xenografts), consistently revealed no staining. Hence, loss of TXNIP suggests a critical role for the development of tumors in xenografts. Furthermore, we investigated TXNIP staining of immunocompetent cells in the proximity of the xenograft tumor tissue. Our findings demonstrate that TXNIP downregulation is a common feature in human tumor xenograft models. Subsequently, TXNIP expression might be used to monitor the functional state of tumor-infiltrating leukocytes in tissue sections and may help to predict response to modern immune therapy.Thioredoxin interacting protein (TXNIP) is a metabolic protein critically involved in redox homeostasis and has been proposed as a tumor suppressor gene in a variety of malignancies. Accordingly, TXNIP is downregulated in breast, bladder, and gastric cancer and in tumor transplant models TXNIP overexpression inhibits growth and metastasis. As TXNIP protein expression has only been investigated in few malignancies, we employed immunohistochemical detection in a large multi-tumor tissue microarray consisting of 2,824 samples from 94 different tumor entities. In general, TXNIP protein was present only in a small proportion of primary tumor samples and in these cases was differently expressed depending on tumor stage and subtype (e.g., renal cell carcinoma, thyroid cancer, breast cancer, and ductal pancreatic cancer). Further, TXNIP protein expression was determined in primary mouse xenograft tumors derived from human cancer cell lines and was immunohistochemically absent in all xenograft tumors investigated. Intriguingly, TXNIP expression became gradually lower in the proximity of the primary tumor tissue and was absent in leukocytes directly adjacent to tumor tissue. In conclusion, these findings suggest that TXNIP downregulation is as a common feature in human tumor xenograft models and that intra-tumoral leukocytes down-regulate TXNIP. Hence TXNIP expression might be used to monitor the functional state of tumor-infiltrating leukocytes in tissue sections.

Highlights

  • Oxidative stress, which is the excessive accumulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), is an important factor in cancer development and progression [1]

  • thioredoxin interacting protein (TXNIP) Expression in Primary Human Tumor Samples of 3662 tumor samples were interpretable in our tissue microarray (TMA) analysis

  • Expression was found in 14% of all cancers, moderate TXNIP expression was found in 8%, and strong

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Summary

Introduction

Oxidative stress, which is the excessive accumulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), is an important factor in cancer development and progression [1]. Cells provide specific antioxidant defense systems to scavenge ROS and to limit damage to proteins, nucleic acids, and lipids [1]. One of such systems is the thioredoxin system, which includes thioredoxin (TRX), thioredoxin reductase (TrxR), α-nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH), and thioredoxin interacting protein (TXNIP) [2,3]. TXNIP was initially described as 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3-upregulated protein 1 (VDUP1) in human promyelocytic leukemia HL-60 cells [4]. It is ubiquitously expressed and highly conserved across different species [5]. TXNIP acts as a negative modulator of TRX by binding to the catalytic center in its reduced state forming a disulfide [8]

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