Differential effects of polymorphic alleles of FGF receptor 4 on colon cancer growth and metastasis
Menée sur des lignées cellulaires et des données issues de l'essai autrichien CORSA, cette étude évalue l'association entre des polymorphismes du gène FGFR4 et le pronostic d'un cancer colorectal
A gly388arg polymorphism (rs351855) in the transmembrane domain of the fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR4) is associated with increased risk, staging and metastasis in several different types of cancer. To specifically assess the impact of the polymorphic FGFR4 in colorectal cancer (CRC), we engineered CRC cell lines with distinct endogenous expression patterns to overexpress either the FGFR4gly or FGFR4arg alleles. The biological analyses revealed an oncogenic importance for both polymorphic alleles, but FGFR4gly was the stronger inducer of tumor growth whereas FGFR4arg was the stronger inducer of migration. An evaluation of clinical specimens revealed that FGFR4 was up-regulated in 20/71 patients independent of gly388arg status. There was no correlation between the presence of an FGFR4arg allele and CRC or polyp risk in 3471 participants of the CORSA study. However, among 182 CRC patients. FGFR4arg-carriers had a 5-fold higher risk of tumors that were stage II or greater. Together, our results established that both allelic forms of FGFR4 exert an oncogenic impact and may serve equally well as therapeutic targets in CRC. One important implication of our findings is that FGFR4arg-carriers are at a higher risk for more aggressive tumors and therefore may profit from early detection measures.