PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Protein expression of ZEB2 in renal cell carcinoma and its prognostic significance in patient survival.

  • Yong Fang,
  • Jinhuan Wei,
  • Jiazheng Cao,
  • Hongwei Zhao,
  • Bing Liao,
  • Shaopeng Qiu,
  • Daohu Wang,
  • Junhang Luo,
  • Wei Chen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0062558
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 5
p. e62558

Abstract

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BACKGROUND: ZEB2 has been reportedly shown to mediate the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and disease aggressiveness in human tumors. However, the expression status of ZEB2 in renal cell carcinoma (RCC) and ZEB2's clinicopathologic/prognostic significance are poorly understood. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: In this study, tissue microarray, immunohistochemistry (IHC) and western blot analyses were utilized to investigate the ZEB2 expression status in RCC and adjacent renal tissue samples. In our study, samples from 116 RCC patients treated with radical nephrectomy were used as a training set to generate a ZEB2 optimal cut-point for patient outcome by receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis. For validation, the correlation of ZEB2 expression with the clinical characteristics and patient outcomes in another set (including 113 patients) was analyzed to validate the obtained cut-point. In the training and validation sets, high expression of ZEB2, defined by ROC analysis, predicted a poorer overall survival and progression-free survival, as evidenced by the univariate and multivariate analyses. In different subsets of overall patients, ZEB2 expression was also a prognostic indicator in patients with stage I/II, stage III/IV, grade 1/2 and grade 3/4 disease (P<0.05). Downregulation of ZEB2 by shRNA decreased the migration and invasion ability of 769-P cells in vitro. Furthermore, high ZEB2 expression was positively correlated with vimentin expression and inversely linked to E-cadherin expression in RCC. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our findings provide a basis for the concept that high ZEB2 expression in RCC may be important in the acquisition of an aggressive phenotype. This evidence suggests that ZEB2 overexpression (examined by IHC) is an independent biomarker for the poor prognosis of patients with RCC.