5 research outputs found

    In uveal melanoma, angiopoietin-2 but not angiopoietin-1 is increased in high-risk tumors, providing a potential druggable target

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    Uveal melanoma (UM) metastasize haematogeneously, and tumor blood vessel density is an important prognostic factor. We hypothesized that proangiogenic factors such as angiopoietin-1 (ANG-1) and angiopoietin-2 (ANG-2), two targetable cytokines, might play a role in tumor development and metastatic behavior. mRNA levels of

    In uveal melanoma, angiopoietin-2 but not angiopoietin-1 is increased in high-risk tumors, providing a potential druggable target

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    Uveal melanoma (UM) metastasize haematogeneously, and tumor blood vessel density is an important prognostic factor. We hypothesized that proangiogenic factors such as angiopoietin-1 (ANG-1) and angiopoietin-2 (ANG-2), two targetable cytokines, might play a role in tumor development and metastatic behavior. mRNA levels of ANG-1 and ANG-2 were determined in 64 tumors using an Illumina HT-12 v4 mRNA chip and compared to clinical, pathologic, and genetic tumor parameters. Tissue expression was also determined by immunohistochemistry (IHC). Samples of aqueous humor were collected from 83 UM-containing enucleated eyes and protein levels that were determined in a multiplex proximity extension assay. High tissue gene expression of ANG-2, but not of ANG-1, was associated with high tumor thickness, high largest basal diameter, involvement of the ciliary body, and with UM-related death (ANG-2 mRNA p &lt; 0.001; ANG-2 aqueous protein p &lt; 0.001). The presence of the ANG-2 protein in aqueous humor correlated with its mRNA expression in the tumor (r = 0.309, p = 0.03). IHC showed that ANG-2 was expressed in macrophages as well as tumor cells. The presence of ANG-2 in the tumor and in aqueous humor, especially in high-risk tumors, make ANG-2 a potential targetable cytokine in uveal melanoma.</p

    Digital PCR-Based T-cell Quantification-Assisted Deconvolution of the Microenvironment Reveals that Activated Macrophages Drive Tumor Inflammation in Uveal Melanoma

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    Uveal melanoma progression can be predicted by gene expression profiles enabling a clear subdivision between tumors with a good (class I) and a poor (class II) prognosis. Poor prognosis uveal melanoma can be subdivided by expression of immune-related genes; however, it is unclear whether this subclassification is justified; therefore, T cells in uveal melanoma specimens were quantified using a digital PCR approach. Absolute T-cell quantification revealed that T-cell influx is present in all uveal melanomas associated with a poor prognosis. However, this infiltrate is only accompanied by differential immune-related gene expression profiles in uveal melanoma with the highest T-cell infiltrate. Molecular deconvolution of the immune profile revealed that a large proportion of the T-cell-related gene expression signature does not originate from lymphocytes but is derived from other immune cells, especially macrophages. Expression of the lymphocyte-homing chemokine CXCL10 by activated macrophages correlated with T-cell infiltration and thereby explains the correlation of T-cell numbers and macrophages. This was validated by in situ analysis of CXCL10 in uveal melanoma tissue with high T-cell counts. Surprisingly, CXCL10 or any of the other genes in the activated macrophage-cluster was correlated with reduced survival due to uveal melanoma metastasis. This effect was independent of the T-cell infiltrate, which reveals a role for activated macrophages in metastasis formation independent of their role in tumor inflammation.Implications: The current report uses an innovative digital PCR method to study the immune environment and demonstrates that absolute T-cell quantification and expression profiles can dissect disparate immune components. Mol Cancer Res; 1-10. ©2018 AACR
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