International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Dec 2020)

Monosomy 3 Influences Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition Gene Expression in Uveal Melanoma Patients; Consequences for Liquid Biopsy

  • Andrea Soltysova,
  • Tatiana Sedlackova,
  • Dana Dvorska,
  • Karin Jasek,
  • Pooneh Chokhachi Baradaran,
  • Viera Horvathova Kajabova,
  • Lucia Demkova,
  • Verona Buocikova,
  • Terezia Kurucova,
  • Darina Lyskova,
  • Alena Furdova,
  • Gabriel Minarik,
  • Pavel Babal,
  • Zuzana Dankova,
  • Bozena Smolkova

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms21249651
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 24
p. 9651

Abstract

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Despite outstanding advances in diagnosis and the treatment of primary uveal melanoma (UM), nearly 50% of UM patients develop metastases via hematogenous dissemination, driven by the epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT). Despite the failure in UM to date, a liquid biopsy may offer a feasible non-invasive approach for monitoring metastatic disease progression and addressing protracted dormancy. To detect circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in UM patients, we evaluated the mRNA expression of EMT-associated transcription factors in CD45-depleted blood fraction, using qRT-PCR. ddPCR was employed to assess UM-specific GNA11, GNAQ, PLCβ4, and CYSLTR2 mutations in plasma DNA. Moreover, microarray analysis was performed on total RNA isolated from tumor tissues to estimate the prognostic value of EMT-associated gene expression. In total, 42 primary UM and 11 metastatic patients were enrolled. All CD45-depleted samples were negative for CTC when compared to the peripheral blood fraction of 60 healthy controls. Tumor-specific mutations were detected in the plasma of 21.4% patients, merely, in 9.4% of primary UM, while 54.5% in metastatic patients. Unsupervised hierarchical clustering of differentially expressed EMT genes showed significant differences between monosomy 3 and disomy 3 tumors. Newly identified genes can serve as non-invasive prognostic biomarkers that can support therapeutic decisions.

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