ADAM28: A potential oncogene involved in asbestos‐related lung adenocarcinomas |
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Authors: | Casey M. Wright Jill E. Larsen Nicholas K. Hayward Maria U. Martins Maxine E. Tan Morgan R. Davidson Santiyagu M. Savarimuthu Rebecca E. McLachlan Linda H. Passmore Morgan N. Windsor Belinda E. Clarke Edwina E. Duhig Ian A. Yang Rayleen V. Bowman Kwun M. Fong |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Medicine, The University of Queensland, QLD, Australia;2. Department of Thoracic Medicine, The Prince Charles Hospital, QLD, Australia;3. Oncogenomics Laboratory, Queensland Institute of Medical Research, QLD, Australia;4. Department of Thoracic Surgery, The Prince Charles Hospital, QLD, Australia;5. Department of Anatomical Pathology, The Prince Charles Hospital, QLD, Australia |
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Abstract: | Asbestos‐related lung cancer accounts for 4–12% of all lung cancers worldwide. Since putative mechanisms of carcinogenesis differ between asbestos and tobacco induced lung cancers, tumors induced by the two agents may be genetically distinct. To identify gene expression biomarkers associated with asbestos‐related lung tumorigenicity we performed gene expression array analysis on tumors of 36 patients with primary lung adenocarcinoma, comparing 12 patients with lung asbestos body counts above levels associated with urban dwelling (ARLC‐AC: asbestos‐related lung cancer‐adenocarcinoma) with 24 patients with no asbestos bodies (NARLC‐AC: non‐asbestos related lung cancer‐adenocarcinoma). Genes differentially expressed between ARLC‐AC and NARLC‐AC were identified on fold change and P value, and then prioritized using gene ontology. Candidates included ZNRF3, ADAM28, PPP1CA, IRF6, RAB3D, and PRDX1. Expression of these six genes was technically and biologically replicated by qRT‐PCR in the training set and biologically validated in three independent test sets. ADAM28, encoding a disintegrin and metalloproteinase domain protein that interacts with integrins, was consistently upregulated in ARLC across all four datasets. Further studies are being designed to investigate the possible role of this gene in asbestos lung tumorigenicity, its potential utility as a marker of asbestos related lung cancer for purposes of causal attribution, and its potential as a treatment target for lung cancers arising in asbestos exposed persons. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc. |
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