Gastro Hep Advances (Jan 2025)

Caspase-4 Has Potential Utility as a Colorectal Tissue Biomarker for Dysplasia and Early-Stage Cancer

  • Laura E. Kane,
  • Brian Flood,
  • Joan Manils,
  • Donna E. McSkeane,
  • Aoife P. Smith,
  • Miriam Tosetto,
  • Fatema Alalawi,
  • Joanna Fay,
  • Elaine Kay,
  • Cara Dunne,
  • Stephen McQuaid,
  • Maurice B. Loughrey,
  • Jacintha O’Sullivan,
  • Elizabeth J. Ryan,
  • Kieran Sheahan,
  • Glen A. Doherty,
  • Emma M. Creagh

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 2
p. 100552

Abstract

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Background and Aims: Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the second most deadly cancer globally. The rapidly rising incidence rate of CRC, coupled with increased diagnoses in individuals <50 years, indicates that early detection of CRC, and those at an increased risk of CRC development, is paramount to improve the survival rates of these patients. Here, we profile caspase-4 expression across 2 distinct CRC development pathways, sporadic CRC (sCRC) and inflammatory bowel disease-associated CRC (IBD-CRC), to examine its utility as a novel biomarker for CRC risk and diagnosis. Methods: Tissue samples from patients with CRC, colonic polyps, IBD-CRC, and sCRC were assessed by immunohistochemistry for caspase-4 expression in epithelial and stromal compartments. RNAseq expression data for caspase-4 in CRC and normal tissue samples were mined from online databases. Results: Epithelial caspase-4 expression is selectively elevated in CRC tumor tissue compared to adjacent normal tissue, where it is not expressed. In the sCRC pathway, caspase-4 is expressed in the epithelial and stromal tissue of all histological subtypes of colonic polyps, with a significant increase in epithelial expression from low-grade dysplasia to high-grade dysplasia progression. For the IBD-CRC pathway, caspase-4 epithelial expression was specifically upregulated in dysplastic and neoplastic tissue of IBD-CRC but was not expressed in normal or inflamed tissue. Conclusion: This study demonstrates that epithelial caspase-4 is selectively expressed in colon tissue during the development of dysplasia. As such, epithelial caspase-4 represents a promising novel tissue biomarker for CRC risk and diagnosis.

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