학술논문

Association Between YKL-40 and Adult Primary Astrocytoma
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Cancer. Jun 01, 2010 116(11):2688-2697
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
0008-543X
Abstract
BACKGROUND:: The YKL-40 coding chitinase 3-like 1 gene is 1 of the most overexpressed genes in human glioblastomas. The objectives of this study were to explore YKL-40 protein expression status and World Health Organization (WHO) pathologic grades of primary human astrocytoma and to investigate the role of YKL-40 in the proliferation of both established and primary astrocytoma cells in vitro. METHODS:: WHO grade 1, 2, 3, and 4 primary astrocytomas (210 patients) were evaluated for YKL-40 protein expression status in immunohistochemical analyses. In addition, after transfection with a plasmid that contained YKL-40 small-interfering RNA (siRNA), cell proliferation and the cell cycle were measured with a cell-viability assay and flow cytometry. Expression levels of phosphorylated, total mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) and protein kinase B (AKT) were detected by Western blot analysis. RESULTS:: The percentage of positive cells and the staining intensity differed significantly between different pathologic tumor grades (P < .001). The YKL-40 immunoreactivity score increased markedly with increased pathologic grade (F = 18.89; P < .001). In the in vitro experiment, the cell cycle was arrested in G1 phase. An inhibitor of the p38 MAPK, SB203580, could partially abrogate the cell proliferation inhibition effect by siRNA treatment. The expression levels of phosphorylated extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 and phosphorylated AKT were notably decreased in siRNA-transfected U87 cells. In contrast, the expression levels of phosphorylated p38 and phosphorylated c-jun N-terminal kinase 1 and 2 increased significantly (P < .01). CONCLUSIONS:: YKL-40 expression status correlated well with the pathologic grade of primary astrocytomas. The current results also indicted that YKL-40 plays a pivotal role in glioma cell proliferation through activation of the MAPK and AKT pathways. YKL-40 may be an attractive target for glioma therapy.