Inactivating mutations of caspase-8 gene in colorectal carcinomas

HS Kim, JW Lee, YH Soung, WS Park, SY Kim, JH Lee… - Gastroenterology, 2003 - Elsevier
HS Kim, JW Lee, YH Soung, WS Park, SY Kim, JH Lee, JY Park, YG Cho, CJ Kim, SW Jeong…
Gastroenterology, 2003Elsevier
Background & Aims: There has been evidence that dysregulation of apoptosis is involved in
the pathogenesis of cancer development. Caspase-8 is an initiation caspase that activates
the caspase cascade during apoptosis. The aim of this study was to explore the possibility
that mutation of the caspase-8 gene might be involved in the development of colorectal
cancer. Methods: We analyzed the entire coding region of the caspase-8 gene for the
detection of somatic mutations in 180 colorectal tumors (98 invasive carcinomas and 82 …
Background & Aims
There has been evidence that dysregulation of apoptosis is involved in the pathogenesis of cancer development. Caspase-8 is an initiation caspase that activates the caspase cascade during apoptosis. The aim of this study was to explore the possibility that mutation of the caspase-8 gene might be involved in the development of colorectal cancer.
Methods
We analyzed the entire coding region of the caspase-8 gene for the detection of somatic mutations in 180 colorectal tumors (98 invasive carcinomas and 82 adenomas) by polymerase chain reaction, single-strand conformation polymorphism, and DNA sequencing.
Results
Overall, we detected a total of 5 somatic mutations in 98 invasive carcinomas (5.1%), but no mutations were detected in 82 adenomas (0%). The frequency of caspase-8 mutation in the carcinomas was significantly higher than that in adenomas (P < 0.05). The 5 mutations consisted of 1 frameshift, 1 nonsense mutation, and 3 missense mutations. We expressed the 5 tumor-derived caspase-8 mutants and found that 3 of the 5 mutations markedly decreased apoptosis activity of caspase-8. Furthermore, expression of the inactivating caspase-8 mutants interfered with apoptosis by death receptor overexpression, indicating that these mutants have dominant-negative inhibition of the death receptor-induced apoptosis.
Conclusions
The presence of caspase-8 mutation in colon carcinomas suggests that caspase-8 gene mutation might lead to the loss of its apoptotic function and contribute to the pathogenesis of colorectal carcinomas, especially at the late stage of colorectal carcinogenesis.
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