Loading…

Retinoic acid receptor-α messenger RNA expression is increased and retinoic acid receptor-γ expression is decreased in Barrett's intestinal metaplasia, dysplasia, adenocarcinoma sequence

Background. Expression levels of the retinoic acid receptors (RAR-α, RAR-β, and RAR-γ) are significantly different in neoplastic tissues compared with non-neoplastic tissues for some tumors. This study investigated whether retinoic acid receptor messenger RNA (mRNA) expression levels are altered in...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Surgery 2001-03, Vol.129 (3), p.267-276
Main Authors: Lord, Reginald V.N., Tsai, Peter I., Danenberg, Kathleen D., Peters, Jeffrey H., DeMeester, Tom R., Tsao-Wei, Denice D., Groshen, Susan, Salonga, Dennis, Park, Ji Min, Crookes, Peter F., Kiyabu, Milton, Chandrasoma, Para, Danenberg, Peter V.
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Background. Expression levels of the retinoic acid receptors (RAR-α, RAR-β, and RAR-γ) are significantly different in neoplastic tissues compared with non-neoplastic tissues for some tumors. This study investigated whether retinoic acid receptor messenger RNA (mRNA) expression levels are altered in Barrett's esophagus and Barrett's adenocarcinoma tissues. Methods. Relative mRNA expression levels of the RARs were quantified by using the ABI 7700 Sequence Detector (Taqman) system in Barrett's intestinal metaplasia (n = 15), dysplasia (n = 6), adenocarcinoma (n = 17), and matching normal esophagus tissues (n = 36). Results. RAR-α expression was significantly increased, and RAR-γ expression was significantly decreased, at higher stages in the Barrett's sequence. There was almost complete loss of RAR-γ expression (relative expression level ≤ 1) in a majority (70%) of the dysplasia and adenocarcinoma tissues. There were significant differences in RAR-α and RAR-γ expression in histopathologically normal tissues in patients with cancer versus patients without cancer. RAR-β expression levels were significantly elevated in adenocarcinoma versus normal esophagus tissues. The RAR expression profile was similar for cancers arising within the esophagus and for cancers arising at the gastroesophageal junction. Conclusions. RAR mRNA expression levels are significantly different in Barrett's tissues compared with normal esophagus tissues, and these levels are significantly different in Barrett's dysplasia and adenocarcinoma tissues compared with nondysplastic tissues. These results suggest that RAR mRNA levels may be useful biomarkers for this disease and that gastroesophageal junction adenocarcinomas are genetically similar to esophageal adenocarcinomas. These results also suggest that a cancer field is present in the esophagus in patients with cancer and that genetic alterations can precede histopathologic alterations in this disease. (Surgery 2001;129:267-76.)
ISSN:0039-6060
1532-7361
DOI:10.1067/msy.2001.110856