PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Overexpression of CARMA3 in non-small-cell lung cancer is linked for tumor progression.

  • Zixuan Li,
  • Lianyue Qu,
  • Qianze Dong,
  • Bo Huang,
  • Haiying Li,
  • Zhongping Tang,
  • Ying Xu,
  • Wenting Luo,
  • Lifeng Liu,
  • Xueshan Qiu,
  • Enhua Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0036903
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 5
p. e36903

Abstract

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We aimed to investigate the clinical significance of the expression of novel scaffold protein CARMA3 in non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and the biological function of CARMA3 in NSCLC cell lines. We observed moderate to high CARMA3 staining in 68.8% of 141 NSCLC specimens compared to corresponding normal tissues. The overexpression of CARMA3 was significantly correlated with TNM stage (P = 0.022) and tumor status (P = 0.013). CARMA3 upregulation also correlated with a shorter survival rate of patients of nodal status N0 (P = 0.042)as well as the expression of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) (P = 0.009). In EGFR mutation positive cases, CARMA3 expression was much higher (87.5%) compared to non-mutation cases (66.1%). In addition, we observed that knockdown of CARMA3 inhibits tumor cell proliferation and invasion, and induces cell cycle arrest at the boundary between the G1 and S phase. We further demonstrated a direct link between CARMA3 and NF-κB activation. The change of biological behavior in CARMA3 knockdown cells may be NF-κB-related. Our findings demonstrated, for the first time, that CARMA3 was overexpressed in NSCLC and correlated with lung cancer progression, EGFR expression, and EGFR mutation. CARMA3 could serve as a potential companion drug target, along with NF-kB and EGFR in EGFR-mutant lung cancers.