PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

CIP2A influences survival in colon cancer and is critical for maintaining Myc expression.

  • Armin Wiegering,
  • Christina Pfann,
  • Friedrich Wilhelm Uthe,
  • Christoph Otto,
  • Lukas Rycak,
  • Uwe Mäder,
  • Martin Gasser,
  • Anna-Maria Waaga-Gasser,
  • Martin Eilers,
  • Christoph-Thomas Germer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0075292
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 10
p. e75292

Abstract

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The cancerous inhibitor of protein phosphatase 2A (CIP2A) is an oncogenic factor that stabilises the c-Myc protein. CIP2A is overexpressed in several tumours, and expression levels are an independent marker for long-term outcome. To determine whether CIP2A expression is elevated in colon cancer and whether it might serve as a prognostic marker for survival, we analysed CIP2A mRNA expression by real-time PCR in 104 colon cancer samples. CIP2A mRNA was overexpressed in colon cancer samples and CIP2A expression levels correlated significantly with tumour stage. We found that CIP2A serves as an independent prognostic marker for disease-free and overall survival. Further, we investigated CIP2A-dependent effects on levels of c-Myc, Akt and on cell proliferation in three colon cancer cell lines by silencing CIP2A using small interfering (si) and short hairpin (sh) RNAs. Depletion of CIP2A substantially inhibited growth of colon cell lines and reduced c-Myc levels without affecting expression or function of the upstream regulatory kinase, Akt. Expression of CIP2A was found to be dependent on MAPK activity, linking elevated c-Myc expression to deregulated signal transduction in colon cancer.