International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Nov 2021)

Prognostic Value of BUB1 for Predicting Non-Muscle-Invasive Bladder Cancer Progression

  • Xuan-Mei Piao,
  • Chaelin You,
  • Young Joon Byun,
  • Ho Won Kang,
  • Junho Noh,
  • Jaehyun Lee,
  • Hee Youn Lee,
  • Kyeong Kim,
  • Won Tae Kim,
  • Seok Joong Yun,
  • Sang-Cheol Lee,
  • Kyuho Kang,
  • Yong-June Kim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms222312756
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 23
p. 12756

Abstract

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Non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC) is a common disease with a high recurrence rate requiring lifetime surveillance. Although NMIBC is not life-threatening, it can progress to muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC), a lethal form of the disease. The management of the two diseases differs, and patients with MIBC require aggressive treatments such as chemotherapy and radical cystectomy. NMIBC patients at a high risk of progression benefit from early immediate cystectomy. Thus, identifying concordant markers for accurate risk stratification is critical to predict the prognosis of NMIBC. Candidate genetic biomarkers associated with NMIBC prognosis were screened by RNA-sequencing of 24 tissue samples, including 16 NMIBC and eight normal controls, and by microarray analysis (GSE13507). Lastly, we selected and investigated a mitotic checkpoint serine/threonine kinase, BUB1, that regulates chromosome segregation during the cell cycle. BUB1 gene expression was tested in 86 NMIBC samples and 15 controls by real-time qPCR. The performance of BUB1 as a prognostic biomarker for NMIBC was validated in the internal Chungbuk cohort (GSE13507) and the external UROMOL cohort (E-MTAB-4321). BUB1 expression was higher in NMIBC patients than in normal controls (p BUB1 was correlated with NMIBC progression (log-rank test, p = 0.007). In in vitro analyses, BUB1 promoted the proliferation of bladder cancer cells by accelerating the G2/M transition of the cell cycle. Conclusively, BUB1 modulates the G2/M transition to promote the proliferation of bladder cancer cells, suggesting that it could serve as a prognostic marker in NMIBC.

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