Disabled Homolog 2 (DAB2) Protein in Tumor Microenvironment Correlates with Aggressive Phenotype in Human Urothelial Carcinoma of the Bladder

Author:

Itami Yoshitaka,Miyake MakitoORCID,Ohnishi Sayuri,Tatsumi Yoshihiro,Gotoh Daisuke,Hori Shunta,Morizawa YousukeORCID,Iida Kota,Ohnishi Kenta,Nakai YasushiORCID,Inoue Takeshi,Anai Satoshi,Tanaka Nobumichi,Fujii TomomiORCID,Shimada Keiji,Furuya HidekiORCID,Khadka Vedbar S.,Deng Youping,Fujimoto Kiyohide

Abstract

Disabled homolog-2 (DAB2) has been reported to be a tumor suppressor gene. However, a number of contrary studies suggested that DAB2 promotes tumor invasion in urothelial carcinoma of the bladder (UCB). Here, we investigated the clinical role and biological function of DAB2 in human UCB. Immunohistochemical staining analysis for DAB2 was carried out on UCB tissue specimens. DAB2 expression levels were compared with clinicopathological factors. DAB2 was knocked-down by small interfering RNA (siRNA) transfection, and then its effects on cell proliferation, invasion, and migration, and changes to epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT)-related proteins were evaluated. In our in vivo assays, tumor-bearing athymic nude mice subcutaneously inoculated with human UCB cells (MGH-U-3 or UM-UC-3) were treated by DAB2-targeting siRNA. Higher expression of DAB2 was associated with higher clinical T category, high tumor grade, and poor oncological outcome. The knock-down of DAB2 decreased both invasion and migration ability and expression of EMT-related proteins. Significant inhibitory effects on tumor growth and invasion were observed in xenograft tumors of UM-UC-3 treated by DAB2-targeting siRNA. Our findings suggested that DAB2 expression was associated with poor prognosis through increased oncogenic properties including tumor proliferation, migration, invasion, and enhancement of EMT in human UCB.

Funder

The National Institutes of Health

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Clinical Biochemistry

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