22 research outputs found
Biomarkers for early detection of high risk cancers: From gliomas to nasopharyngeal carcinoma
Nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NpC) is a malignant disease associated with Epstein-Barr virus infection, and often diagnosed at an
advanced stage. This significantly curtails patient survival. We hypothesize that a panel of biomarkers can be assembled to assess
NpC incidence, early detection, and tumor progression during therapeutic intervention. Our thesis rests on a model of
successfully predicting high-risk gliomas by means of a carefully crafted panel of molecular mitotic biomarkers (i.e., securin,
survivin and MCM2). The strategy we propose holds strong promise for prevention and cure of NpC. The approach we propose
seeks to identify certain biomarkers from viral materials, patient tissues and assessment of related diseases, whose signatures,
taken together, will be endowed with some degree of congruency, or sense of a coordinated language (i.e., “votes”). Biomarker
“voting” will then permit to outline a broad coordinated molecular map for the molecular and epigenetic characterization of each
individual patient's NpC tumor. We will draw on the process of contrasting biomarkers in health and disease, which rests on the
auto-proteomic concept particularly relevant in high-risk cancer individuals, such as is the case for NpC. In brief we defend,
current advances in human proteome profiling proffers the possibility of having individual baseline proteomic profiles using local
body fluids (e.g., saliva, nasal secretions, sputum) or systemic fluids (e.g., plasma, serum, cerebrospinal fluid) to unravel a
personalized molecular map for high-risk NpC individuals. Regular check-up will monitor for new or impending manifestations
of NpC, and provide a secure assessment of incidence and early detection
LCK, survivin and PI-3K in the molecular biomarker profiling of oral lichen planus and oral squamous cell carcinoma.
T cell signaling is critical in oral lichen planus (OLP) based on the pathogenesis of this chronic inflammatory autoimmune mucocutaneous lesion. Lck plays a key role in T cell signaling; ultimately this signaling affects other targets such as PI-3K. Excessive activity in PI-3K inhibits apoptosis and promotes uncontrolled cell growth. Molecular biomarker profiling in OLP, Chronic Interface Mucosities (CIM), Epithelial Dysplasia (EpD) and Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma (SCCA) with application of the principle of biomarker voting may represent a new frontier in the diagnosis, assessment and the arguable debate of OLP transformation to cancer. The presence of Lck, PI-3K and Survivin, a cancer specific anti-apoptotic protein was assessed, using immunohistochemistry and tissue micro-array on patient samples, in OLP, SCCA, CIM and EpD. Lck expression was very high in 78.6 % of OLP patients compared to 3.7% in SCCA; PI-3K was high in 63% of SCCA, 100% of EpD, and 35.7% OLP cases. Survivin was high in 64.3% of OLP cases, 96.3% of SCCA, and 100% of EpD. CIM cases may be slightly different molecularly to OLP. Taken together, our data suggest that biomarker protein voting can be effectively used to isolate high-risk OLP cases. Specifically, we show data with four remarkable cases demonstrating that molecular factors are predictive of histopathology. We conclude that it is safer to treat OLP as premalignant lesions, to adopt aggressive treatment measure in histopathologic described well and moderately differentiated SCCA, and to monitor progress of these diseases molecularly using individualized auto-proteomic approach. The use of Lck inhibitors in OLP management needs to be investigated in the future
Immune surveillance of nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NpC)
In the U.S., nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NpC) kills >7,600 each year. Deaths are predominantly among adult men, and in most
cases, early detection and treatment can save lives. Despite the annual spending of approximately 3.2 billion dollars on head and
neck cancer research, NpC remains a neglected disease since its fatality rates are among the lowest nation wide. The relative
survival rates from NpC have not improved in the U.S. in the last 20 years. Infection with Epstein Barr Virus (EBV) is an important
co-factor in the etiology of NpC. In other regions of the word (e.g., South-East Asia, Latin America), EBV infection and NpCrelated
prevalence and mortality are substantially higher and more alarming. Epidemiological data indicate high prevalence of
EBV infection and increased risk for NpC among Central and South American and Asian immigrants in the U.S., and also predict a
sharp increase in NpC incidence in the next decade. To face this emerging threat, it is important to develop and validate novel
modes of detection and intervention for NpC. To this end, we characterized the proteomic signature of NpC, and of the tumor
infiltrating lymphocytes of the CD8+, activated (CD38+, mTOR+) and regulatory immune cell (FoxP3+) phenotype. Paraffinized
biopsies were processed, and tissue microarrays constructed and tested by immunohistochemistry and triimmunohistofluorescence
for a battery of signaling markers, including AKT and PI3K, in conjunction with EBV status and
ANKRD11, an NpC susceptibility biomarker. Microphotographs, analyzed and quantified by confocal microscopy and fractal
analysis, suggest new avenues for immunotherapies of NpC
Relationship between human oral lichen planus and oral squamous cell carcinoma at a genomic level: a datamining study
The leader gene approach is a data mining method based on the systematic search for genes involved in a specific process and their ranking
according to the number of interconnections with the other genes identified. The genes with the strongest interconnections are termed leader
genes, since they may be supposed to play an important role in the process. The potential of malignant progression of OLP to oral squamous
cell carcinoma (OSCC) is still not completely clear. In this study, the leader gene approach is applied to investigate the association between
OLP and OSCC at a molecular level. Results were integrated with those obtained in an experimental analysis (see paper 1 of this series).
Genes involved in OLP and OSCC were identified by systematic queries to dedicated databases. Interconnections among identified genes
were calculated and given a confidence value using STRING database. Leader genes were identified by clustering genes according to their
interconnections. This theoretical analysis shows that OLP and OSCC share two leader genes: TP53 and CDKN1A, involved in the PI3K
signalling events mediated by AKT pathway. This finding and those obtained in the experimental analysis suggest the possible involvement
of some key genes/proteins LCK, PIK3CA, BIRC5, TP53 and CDKN1A in the malignant progression from OLP to OSCC. Moreover, these
findings support the role of some molecular pathways, namely IL2 signalling events mediated by PI3K, PI3K signalling events mediated by
AKT, and, possibly, Aurora A signalling in the association between OLP and OSCC
The role of the microenvironment in tumor immune surveillance
The evidence appears compelling that the microenvironment, and associated biological cellular and molecular factors, may contribute to the progression of
a variety of tumors. The effects of the microenvironment may directly influence the plasticity of T cell lineages, which was recently discussed (O'Shea &
Paul, 2010 [4]). To review the putative role of the microenvironment in modulating the commitment of tumor immune surveillance, we use the model of
oral premalignant lesions
Molecular epigenetics, chromatin, and NeuroAIDS/HIV: Immunopathological implications
Epigenetics studies factors related to the organism and environment that modulate inheritance from generation to generation. Molecular epigenetics examines non-coding DNA (ncdDNA) vs. coding DNA (cdDNA), and
pertains to every domain of physiology, including immune and brain function. Molecular cartography, including genomics, proteomics, and interactomics, seeks to recognize and to identify the multi-faceted and
intricate array of interacting genes and gene products that characterize the function and specialization of each individual cell in the context of cell-cell interaction, tissue, and organ function. Molecular
cartography, epigenetics, and chromatin assembly, repair and remodeling (CARR), which, together with the RNA interfering signaling complex (RISC), is responsible for much of the control and regulation of gene
expression, intersect
Expanding the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (Ex-GRADE) for Evidence-Based Clinical Recommendations: Validation Study
Clinicians use general practice guidelines as a source of support for their intervention, but how much confidence should they place on these recommendations? How much confidence should patients place on these recommendations? Various instruments are available to assess the quality of evidence of research, such as the revised Wong scale (R-Wong) which examines the quality of research design, methodology and data analysis, and the revision of the assessment of multiple systematic reviews (R-AMSTAR), which examines the quality of systematic reviews