Gastrointestinal Disorders (Jun 2024)

The Innate Immune System Surveillance Biomarker p87 in African Americans and Caucasians with Small High-Grade Dysplastic Adenoma [SHiGDA] and Right-Sided <i>JAK3</i> Colon Mutations May Explain the Presence of Multiple Cancers Revealing an Important Minority of Patients with <i>JAK3</i> Mutations and Colorectal Neoplasia

  • Martin Tobi,
  • Xiaoqing Zhao,
  • Rebecca Rodriquez,
  • Yosef Y. Tobi,
  • Tapan Ganguly,
  • Donald Kuhn,
  • Benita McVicker,
  • Michael J. Lawson,
  • John Lieb,
  • Jaime L. Lopes

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/gidisord6020034
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 2
pp. 497 – 512

Abstract

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Colorectal cancer (CRC) outcomes in terms of incidence and mortality are significantly worse in African Americans than other Americans. While differences in primary preventions for neoplasia (diet, obesity remediation, aspirin prophylaxis) are being elucidated, genetic mutations affecting premalignant lesions and immune response mechanisms may possibly also explain the increased incidence and mortality, particularly from right-sided disease. Objective: Our team therefore examined colonic segments seeking to test the hypothesis that the immune response and somatic genetic profiles of the colonic anatomic segments may vary and thus account for variations in neoplasia risk among the various colonic segments revealing an antigenic relationship with precancerous lesions. The p87 antigenic field effect is recognized via Adnab-9 antibody immunohistochemistry to be significantly less in the right colon in African Americans, particularly in the cecum. Method: Since small high-grade dysplastic adenomas (SHiGDA) likely missed by CRC screening may progress to cancer, we used Ion Torrent™ sequencing of DNA extracted from four normal colonic segments (two left-sided and two right) of patients with SHiGDAs. We also contrasted unique mutational fields in one patient with a large HiGDA (APC with unique mutations) and one patient who prospectively developed a SHiGDA (JAK3). Result: The SHiGDA (small high-grade dysplastic polyp) patient was p87 negative for any extracted stool, saliva, or colonic effluent via ELISA (enzyme linked immunoadsorbant assay). Furthermore, mean values of expression in segments from the right colon were reduced with respect to the means obtained from the left segments in 233 patients evaluated for a p87 field effect. This has recently been shown to be the case in a large cohort of AA and Caucasian 2294 patients, possibly explaining the right-sided CRC disparity in African Americans and the subsequent increase in mortality. This field effect disparity is also true for two cancers contracted by the SHiGDa patient (lung and prostate). Conclusion: Thus, this pilot study suggests that the reduction in p87 in the right colon is possibly correlated with JAK3 mutations. If confirmed, JAK3 mutations, known to be associated with immune aberrations, may provide a mechanistic explanation for the lack of a p87 (protein 87 kilodaltons) field in some patients with HGD polyps who might benefit from possible intervention such as more intensive screening. Limited microbiome studies were also performed on two patients with familial cancer syndromes and these compared favorably with controls available from the literature.

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