Abstract

BackgroundFour and a half LIM domain protein-2 (FHL2) is part of the focal adhesion structures modulating cell motility. FHL2 may translocate into the nucleus serving as a transcriptional cofactor binding several transcription factors. Overexpression of FHL2 has been linked to cancer progression in various neoplasias. The aim of the present study was to determine, whether FHL2's function as nuclear cofactor plays a prognostic role in invading tumor cells of sporadic and HNPCC-associated colorectal cancer (CRC). DesignImmunohistochemical staining intensity of nuclear FHL2 was quantified by Remmele score analysing 47 sporadic and 42 HNPCC-associated colorectal cancers. Analysis was restricted to carcinoma cells of the tumoral invasion front. ResultsConfocal microscopy detected nuclear expression of FHL2 in colon cancer cells and absence of nuclear FHL2 signal in normal colon enterocytes. In colon cancer, nuclear FHL2 expression was predominantly observed in low-differentiated, often mucinous tumor areas. 42.55% of sporadic and 54.76% of HNPCC-associated CRC showed enhanced (Remmele score 6–12) nuclear FHL2 expression in the carcinoma cells of the tumoral advancing edge. Enhanced nuclear FHL2 expression was significantly linked to lymphatic metastasis in sporadic CRC (p=0.0197) and almost reached significance in HNPCC-associated CRC (p=0.0545). In contrast, nuclear FHL2 expression was neither associated with hematogenic metastasis in sporadic (p=0.7087) nor in HNPCC-associated colorectal cancer (p=0.3007). ConclusionsWe recently demonstrated that enhanced nuclear FHL2 expression in tumor stroma of sporadic colon cancer is associated with lymphatic metastasis. The results of the present study indicate a synergistic effect of nuclear cofactor FHL2 in tumor cells as well as in peritumoral stroma cells promoting lymphatic metastasis in sporadic CRC. As HNPCC-associated tumors did not show a significant association between tumoral nuclear FHL2 expression and lymphatic metastasis we speculate, that the intensive lymphocytic immune response in HNPCC precludes a direct contact of tumor cells and stromal cells resulting in reduced lymphatic spread.

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