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DOG1 overexpression is associated with mismatch repair deficiency and BRAF mutations but unrelated to cancer progression in colorectal cancer

Authors :
Kristina, Jansen
Martina, Kluth
Niclas C, Blessin
Claudia, Hube-Magg
Michael, Neipp
Hamid, Mofid
Hannes, Lárusson
Thies, Daniels
Christoph, Isbert
Stephan, Coerper
Daniel, Ditterich
Holger, Rupprecht
Albert, Goetz
Christian, Bernreuther
Guido, Sauter
Ria, Uhlig
Waldemar, Wilczak
Ronald, Simon
Stefan, Steurer
Eike, Burandt
Daniel, Perez
Jakob R, Izbicki
Frank, Jacobsen
Till S, Clauditz
Andreas H, Marx
Till, Krech
Source :
Histology and histopathology. 37(8)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The transmembrane channel protein DOG1 (Discovered on GIST1) is normally expressed in the gastrointestinal interstitial cells of Cajal and also in gastrointestinal stroma tumors arising from these cells. However, there is also evidence for a relevant role of DOG1 expression in colorectal cancers. This study was undertaken to search for associations between DOG1 expression and colon cancer phenotype and key molecular alterations.A tissue microarray containing samples from more than 1,800 colorectal cancer patients was analyzed by immunohistochemistry.DOG1 immunostaining was detected in 503 (30.2%) of 1,666 analyzable colorectal cancers and considered weak in 360 (21.6%), moderate in 78 (4.7%), and strong in 65 (3.9%). Strong DOG1 immunostaining was associated with advanced pT stage (p=0.0367) and nodal metastases (p=0.0145) but these associations were not retained in subgroups of 1,135 mismatch repair proficient and 86 mismatch repair deficient tumors. DOG1 positivity was significantly linked to several molecular tumor features including mismatch repair deficiency (p=0.0034), BRAF mutations (p0.0001), nuclear p53 accumulation (p=0.0157), and PD-L1 expression (p=0.0199) but unrelated to KRAS mutations and the density of tumor infiltrating CD8 positive lymphocytes.Elevated DOG1 expression is frequent in colorectal cancer and significantly linked to important molecular alterations. However, DOG1 overexpression is largely unrelated to histopathological parameters of cancer aggressiveness and may thus not serve as a prognostic parameter for this tumor entity.

Details

ISSN :
16995848
Volume :
37
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Histology and histopathology
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........8dae8724fb86b7d2add06238b3f7f442