
PLEKHS1: A new molecular marker predicting risk of progression of non‑muscle‑invasive bladder cancer
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- Published online on: August 2, 2019 https://doi.org/10.3892/ol.2019.10706
- Pages: 3471-3480
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Copyright: © Pignot et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of Creative Commons Attribution License.
Abstract
Introduction
Bladder cancer is the sixth most common cause of cancer mortality and its incidence has increased markedly in recent decades (1,2) as well as an increasing prevalence of established risk factors such as smoking, overweight, physical inactivity, and changing reproductive patterns associated with urbanization and economic development. Based on GLOBOCAN estimates, about 14.1 million new cancer cases and 8.2 million deaths occurred in 2012 worldwide. Over the years, the burden has shifted to less developed countries, which currently account for about 57% of cases and 65% of cancer deaths worldwide. Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death among males in both more and less developed countries, and has surpassed breast cancer as the leading cause of cancer death among females in more developed countries; breast cancer remains the leading cause of cancer death among females in less developed countries. Other leading causes of cancer death in more developed countries include colorectal cancer among males and females and prostate cancer among males. In less developed countries, liver and stomach cancer among males and cervical cancer among females are also leading causes of cancer death. Although incidence rates for all cancers combined are nearly twice as high in more developed than in less developed countries in both males and females, mortality rates are only 8 to 15% higher in more developed countries. This disparity reflects regional differences in the mix of cancers, which is affected by risk factors and detection practices, and/or the availability of treatment. Risk factors associated with the leading causes of cancer death include tobacco use (lung, colorectal, stomach, and liver cancer. Current prognostic factors, namely TNM stage and pathological grade, insufficiently predict outcome at the individual level. The different outcome for patients with the same stage and grade calls for new prognostic molecular markers that may also serve as therapeutic targets.
Several high-throughput studies have focused on delineating genomic changes and gene expression in the various stages of bladder-cancer development and progression. Recent genomic analyses, part of The Cancer Genome Atlas, have identified several new target genes not previously described in bladder carcinogenesis (3–6).
Pleckstrin homology domain-containing S1 (PLEKHS1) is one of the most remarkable targets, because after telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT), it is the second gene of the human genome showing frequent somatic non-coding mutations within its promoter (7). This gene, located on chromosome 10q25.3, encodes the PLEKHS1 protein with unknown function. These mutations are single-nucleotide substitutions in the PLEKHS1 proximal promoter (in intron 1 with a non-coding exon 1 from NM_024889.4): substitutions that effect guanine at position Chr.10: 115511590 and cytosine at position Chr.10: 115511593 from the GRCh37 (hg19) genomic coordinate (or c.-20+70G and c.-20+73C from NM_024889.4). These mutations are close to the translation start site of the PLEKHS1 gene (−3,447 and −3,444 bp upstream of the translation start site) and are flanked by stretches of 10 bp on both sides that are palindromic to each other. The two PLEKHS1 promoter mutations could be considered among the most common noncoding mutations in cancer. In bladder cancer, almost 40% of tumors could be affected by promoter mutations of this gene (8). However, data on messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) expression levels in bladder cancer are still lacking.
We analyzed the frequency of promoter mutations and mRNA expression of PLEKHS1 in two large series of 335 bladder tumors: 162 non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC) (71 and 91, respectively) and 173 muscle-invasive bladder cancers (MIBC) (83 and 90, respectively). A retrospective review of patient outcomes allowed for performing survival analyses to highlight the putative prognostic value of this gene.
Patients and methods
Patients and samples
We analyzed samples from two series of patients with urothelial carcinoma of the bladder. The first series consisted of 154 patients who had undergone transurethral bladder resection or a radical cystectomy in our hospital between 2002 and 2007. Immediately after surgery, tumor samples from each patient were frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at −80°C [for DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) and RNA extraction] and fixed in formaldehyde. Specimens of normal bladder tissue from 20 patients undergoing surgery unrelated to bladder tumors (transurethral resection of the prostate, prostatic adenomectomy) were used as sources of normal bladder tissues.
Each tumor was reviewed by two pathologists (DD and MS) who were blinded to the clinical outcomes. Tumors were re-staged according to the 2009 TNM classification of bladder tumors (9) and were graded according to the WHO 2004 tumor-grading scheme (10). Standard follow-up visits followed current guidelines.
The second series was collected from 181 patients treated surgically between 1988 and 2006 at Henri Mondor Hospital, Institut Gustave Roussy (Villejuif, France) and Foch Hospital (Suresnes, France). Pure SCC and pure adenocarcinoma were excluded. Immediately after surgery, tumor samples from each patient were frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at −80°C (for DNA and RNA extraction) and fixed in formaldehyde. For non muscle invasive cases (stage Ta or T1), TURB material was used; for muscle invasive cases, TURB or cystectomy material was used, without prior neoadjuvant chemotherapy, as previously described in Rebouissou et al (11).
All patients provided written informed consent. These studies received approval from an institutional review board, Centre d'Éthique Clinique de l'Hôpital Cochin, and was conducted according to the principles outlined in the Declaration of Helsinki.
DNA mutation analysis
PLEKHS1 has two mutational spots that are well described. The assessment was performed by a screening with high-resolution melt (HRM) analysis followed by Sanger sequencing of samples with a mutated profile on HRM to validate the HRM data and determine the nomenclature of mutations found. The nucleotide sequences for the primers were for PLEKHS1-U (5′-CTTCCAAGGCTGGGATGATCTA-3′) and PLEKHS1-L (5′-AAGAAAGTGCCCATAACAGAAATACA-3′) (polymerase chain reaction (PCR) product of 107 bp).
Real-time RT-qPCR
The theoretical basis, primers and PCR consumables, RNA extraction, complementary deoxyribonucleic acid (cDNA) synthesis, and PCR-reaction conditions were previously described in detail (12). One endogenous RNA control gene was chosen, namely TBP (GenBank accession no. NM_003194), which encodes the TATA box-binding protein. Because PLEKHS1 was expressed in tumor samples but not normal bladder tissue, values were normalized so that a Ct value of 35 was set to 1. Taking into account the optimal cut-off for PLEKHS1, mRNA values ≥100 were considered overexpression.
Primers were chosen with the assistance of the Oligo 6.0 computer program (National Biosciences, Plymouth, MN). The nucleotide primer sequences were PLEKHS1-U (5′-AAGATGTTTAAATGCCACCCTGATG-3′) and PLEKHS1-L (5′-CCAGTCTTTAATCTTCTCCCTGTCGT-3′) (PCR product of 99 bp). Experiments were performed in duplicate for each data point.
Statistical analysis
The clinicopathologic features of NMIBC and MIBC were tested for their association with tumor recurrence and survival by Student's t-test for continuous variables or χ2 test for qualitative variables. The distribution of mRNA levels was described with medians (range). Relationships between clinical and histological variables and mRNA levels of PLEKHS1 were tested by the non-parametric Mann-Whitney U test and Kruskal-Wallis H-test. Overall survival (OS) was calculated from the date of surgery until death or the last follow-up. Recurrence-free survival (RFS) was defined as the time from the date of surgery to the first local relapse or first metastasis. For NMIBC, progression-free survival (PFS) was defined as the time from the date of surgery to progression to muscle-invasive disease. Survival curves were derived from Kaplan-Meier estimates. The log-rank test was used to compare survival between subgroups. The prognostic impact of mRNA levels, adjusted for the other prognostic factors, was assessed by Cox proportional-hazards regression analysis, estimating hazard ratios and 95% confidence intervals. The variables significant in univariate analysis (P<0.10) were included in multivariate analysis. Differences were considered significant at P<0.05.
Results
Clinicopathologic characteristics of the cohorts
Complete clinical, histological and survival data were obtained from medical records for these 154 patients [129 men and 25 women; median age 70 years (range, 31–91)]. Pathological staging showed NMIBC in 71 patients (25 low-grade pTa, 17 high-grade pTa, 29 high-grade pT1) and high-grade MIBC in 83 patients. For NMIBC, the median follow-up was 57.4 months (range, 1–158 months; mean follow-up, 61 months). For MIBC, the median follow-up was 12.5 months (range, 1–152 months; mean follow-up, 29 months). In the MIBC cohort, 12 patients (14.5%) received neoadjuvant chemotherapy before cystectomy and 25 (30.1%) received adjuvant chemotherapy taking into account pathological characteristics of the tumor and renal function. Clinical, histological and survival characteristics for the first series are presented in Tables I and II.
![]() | Table II.Clinical, pathological and survival characteristics of the 83 muscle-invasive bladder cancer of the first series. |
The second series consisted of an independent cohort of 181 patients with bladder cancer [150 men and 31 women; median age 67 years (range, 30–95)]. Pathological staging showed NMIBC in 91 patients (33 low-grade pTa, 17 high-grade pTa, 41 high-grade pT1) and high-grade MIBC in 90 patients. In this second cohort, molecular subgroups (basal phenotype, called MC7, vs non-basal phenotype) were previously determined by using the CIT (Carte d'Identité des Tumeurs) classification (11) we identified an MIBC subgroup accounting for 23.5% of MIBC, associated with shorter survival and displaying a basal-like phenotype, as shown by the expression of epithelial basal cell markers. Basal-like tumors presented an activation of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR). None patient of the second cohort received neoadjuvant chemotherapy. As in the first cohort, patients received adjuvant chemotherapy taking into account pathological characteristics of the tumor if they were eligible. Clinical and histological variables did not differ between the two series, except for history of NMIBC (Table III).
DNA mutations of PLEKHS1
DNA mutation analysis involved 103 available tumor DNA samples (44 NMIBC and 59 MIBC) from the first series and 18 normal bladder samples, then the 181 tumor samples (91 NMIBC and 90 MIBC) from the second series.
In the first series, 11/44 NMIBC (25.0%) and 19/59 MIBC (32.2%) samples had a promoter-mutated profile (Table IV). The PLEKHS1 promoter exhibited recurrent mutations at two genomic positions: c.-20+70 (G>A and G>C) and c.-20+73 (C>A, C>T and C>G). NMIBC and MIBC samples did not differ by type of mutation (P=0.43).
In the second series, 30/91 NMIBC (33.0%) and 34/90 MIBC (37.8%) samples had a promoter-mutated profile (Table IV). The DNA-mutated profile was not significantly associated with clinical parameters for patients with NMIBC (Table V) or MIBC (Table VI). Regarding molecular subgroups in MIBC, a DNA-mutated profile was significantly more frequent with the basal phenotype (MC7) than the non-basal phenotype (61.5 vs. 27.1%, P=0.0025). PLEKHS1 DNA mutation was not associated with prognosis, in terms of recurrence or progression with NMIBC and in terms of RFS or OS with MIBC (data not shown).
![]() | Table V.Association of clinicopathological variables and PLEKHS1 DNA mutated profile with NMIBC from the second series. |
![]() | Table VI.Association of clinicopathological variables and PLEKHS1 DNA mutated profile with MIBC from the second series. |
mRNA expression of PLEKHS1
The mRNA expression of PLEKHS1 was assessed in the first series (n=154). The median mRNA PLEKHS1 level was 19.7 [range, 0.0–972.6] with NMIBC and 25.7 [0.0–2288.1] with MIBC, vs. 0.0 [0.0–21.4] in normal bladder samples. PLEKHS1 was overexpressed in NMIBC and MIBC versus normal bladder tissue (P=0.00031 and P=0.000025), with no difference in level between NMIBC and MIBC (P=0.51). Overall, 22.5 and 27.7% of NMIBC and MIBC tumors showed PLEKHS1 overexpression (vs. 0% in normal bladder samples, P<0.01). PLEKHS1 mRNA level was not associated with DNA mutations in NMIBC (P=0.39) or MIBC (P=0.84).
Prognostic value of PLEKHS1 mRNA overexpression
PLEKHS1 mRNA overexpression was not significantly associated with clinical variables in NMIBC (Table VII) or MIBC (Table VIII). With NMIBC, PLEKHS1 overexpression was associated with worse PFS on univariate analysis (P=0.0069) (Fig. 1). Five- and 10-year PFS rates were 72.4 and 38.8% with PLEKHS1 overexpression versus 88.9 and 88.7% without PLEKHS1 overexpression. Other clinical variables affecting PFS on univariate analysis with P<0.10 on log-rank test included T stage and grade and were retained for multivariate analysis. On multivariate analysis, PLEKHS1 overexpression remained an independent prognostic factor of PFS (P=0.034) (Table IX).
![]() | Table VII.Association of clincopathological variables and PLEKHS1 mRNA level with NMIBC from the first series. |
![]() | Table VIII.Association of clinicopathological variables and PLEKHS1 mRNA level with MIBC from the first series. |
![]() | Table IX.Cox proportional-hazards regression analysis of factors affecting progression-free survival with non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer. |
Overall, 21/28 patients (75%) who received Bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) therapy showed recurrent NMIBC or progression to an invasive tumor during follow-up, including 15 (53.6%) within the first 2 years. The median PLEKHS1 mRNA level was higher but not significantly with BCG-refractory tumor or early recurrence (<24 months) than for BCG responders (no recurrence or >24 months): 40.8 [range, 0.0–375.5] vs. 15.2 [0.6–381.6] (P=0.80).
With MIBC, PLEKHS1 overexpression was not associated with RFS or OS (P=0.33 and P=0.057, respectively).
Discussion
Mutations of PLEKHS1 are non-coding and are located in the gene promoter and therefore cannot be detected by whole-exome analyses. This is also the case for non-coding mutations located on the upstream regulatory sequences for genes such as TERT, WD repeat domain 74 (WDR74) and succinate dehydrogenase complex subunit D (SDHD) (8). Point mutations in the TERT promoter are the best known and occur in a subset of tumors with clinical interest. In bladder urothelial carcinomas, almost two thirds of tumors show somatic test mutations (13).
To our knowledge, this is the first study to assess PLEKHS1 DNA mutations and mRNA expression in bladder cancer. This assessment is of outmost importance because the association of gene expression and the prognostic impact of promoter mutations in the cancer remain unknown. Whole-genome sequencing of non-coding somatic mutations, rather than these exome studies, might provide answers to these deliberations.
We investigated DNA mutations and mRNA expression in a large series of 154 bladder cancer cases. The results of DNA analysis were then validated in an independent second series (n=181). In these two series, tumors were half non-muscle invasive and half muscle invasive. Characteristics of both populations are consistent with urothelial carcinoma presentation. Moreover, we observed the classical prognostic factors (TNM stage and grade).
We showed a high frequency of promoter DNA mutations for PLEKHS1, detected in about one-third of bladder tumors (NMIBC and MIBC). Our results are consistent with the princeps study of Weinhold et al describing PLEKHS1 DNA mutations in 8/20 samples (40%) of bladder cancer (8). This high rate of DNA mutations supports the concept of an essential involvement of this gene in bladder carcinogenesis, possibly similar to human TERT. It is also of interest as a biomarker to detect circulating tumor DNA that can be used for a variety of clinical and research purposes for bladder cancer.
In our study, PLEKHS1 mutations were particularly frequent with the basal MIBC phenotype, which is known to have poor prognosis but is associated with improved survival after neoadjuvant chemotherapy (14). Further research is needed to assess the role of PLEKHS1 in the chemosensitivity of MIBC.
PLEKHS1 mRNA was overexpressed in approximatively one-quarter of bladder tumors, regardless of stage and grade. As well, the expression was particularly high in some tumor samples, but normal bladder tissue showed very low levels.
Although the rates of mutations appear to be almost the same as the proportion of mRNA overexpression, we did not find an association between DNA alterations and mRNA expression. This is an unexpected result suggesting that mutations in the PLEKHS1 promoter probably do not affect transcription and are not responsible for the increased mRNA expression in our bladder tumor series. Our results disagree with those of Weinhold et al., who showed PLEKHS1 mutations inversely correlated with mRNA expression level in a small series of 20 bladder tumors (8). In contrast, somatic mutations in the TERT promoter increased the expression of telomerase (13).
In NMIBC, PLEKHS1 overexpression was associated with poor prognosis and increased risk of progression to muscle-invasive disease. The overexpression remained an independent prognostic factor on multivariate analysis, which is quite remarkable. Indeed, except for TNM stage and pathological grade, we have no molecular markers to distinguish tumors that would be able to progress in muscle-invasive disease during follow-up. This is especially crucial for pT1 high-grade tumors, which have been shown to progress in 30 to 50% of cases during the first 5 years. Early identification of patients at risk of disease progression may lead to more aggressive therapeutic strategies, such as early cystectomy. One of the main issues is the potential response of these tumors to BCG therapy. In our series, even though PLEKHS1 mRNA expression was three times higher with early recurrent or refractory tumor than other tumors, PLEKHS1 was not a significant predictive factor of response to BCG therapy. However, the small number of patients who received BCG may explain the lack of statistical power in our study.
One limitation of our study is that a longer follow-up or a larger cohort of patients may be needed to show significance, especially for pT1 tumors and response to BCG. To confirm these data, prospective clinical studies associated with a molecular evaluation of tumors are needed. We tried to assess protein expression by western blot analysis and immunohistochemistry, but the two primary anti-PLEKHS1 antibodies used (i.e., HPA037583, Sigma and H00079949-T01, Abnova) showed no specific protein bands on western blot analysis or on immunostaining (data not shown), which suggests no qualitative antibody available for PLEKHS1. Functional analyses should probably be done in parallel to investigate the role of PLEKHS1 in carcinogenesis. Recently, Grossmann et al. identified an interaction between PIK3R3 (p55c regulatory subunit of PI3 kinase) and PLEKHS1 (15), but the significance of this protein interaction remains uncertain. In our series, even if PLEKHS1 mutations were significantly more frequent with the basal than non-basal MIBC phenotype, we did not identify any other associated gene or pathway alterations. Therefore, despite its prognostic value, PLEKHS1 cannot be considered a therapeutic target at this time.
Our results support the involvement of PLEKHS1 in bladder carcinogenesis. DNA mutations were observed in almost one-third of bladder cancers and approximately one quarter of NMIBC and MIBC tumors showed mRNA overexpression. In MIBC, PLEKHS1 mutations seem frequent with the basal phenotype. In NMIBC, PLEKHS1 overexpression may be an independent prognostic factor of progression to muscle-invasive disease. Our study has many biases since it is a retrospective clinical study, small cohort and can only be considered as a preliminary study. The clinical interest remains to be demonstrated by a prospective study centered on high grade NMIBC. Further studies are needed to dissect the mechanisms of action and the specific role of PLEKHS1 in bladder carcinogenesis and to develop therapeutic inhibitors.
Acknowledgements
Not applicable.
Funding
No funding was received.
Availability of data and materials
The datasets used and/or analyzed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.
Authors' contributions
GP and CLG contributed to the acquisition and interpretation of data, and manuscript writing. SV, AS and FL contributed to the acquisition of data. FR, YA, NBD, MZ and BT aquired the data. DD contributed to acquisition and interpretation of data. IB contributed to the conception and design of the study, and interpretation of data. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.
Ethics approval and consent to participate
The present study was approved by the local ethics and research committee of Mondor and Foch Hospitals, Centre d'Éthique Clinique de l'Hôpital Cochin (descriptive retrospective study). All patients provided written informed consent.
Patient consent for publication
All patients provided informed consent.
Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
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