Metastatic melanoma is a disease with a poor prognosis that currently lacks effective treatments. Critical biological features of metastasis include acquisition of migratory competence, growth factor independence, and invasive potential. In an attempt to identify genes that contribute to melanoma pathogenesis, a genomewide search using bacterial artificial chromosome array comparative genomic hybridization and single nucleotide polymorphism arrays in a series of 64 metastatic melanoma samples and 20 melanoma cell lines identified increased copy numbers of Gab2 located on 11q14.1. Gab2 is an adaptor protein that potentiates the activation of the Ras-Erk and PI3K-Akt pathways and has recently been implicated in human cancer; however, its role in melanoma has not been explored. In this study, we found that Gab2 was either amplified (ϳ11%) and/or overexpressed (ϳ50%) in melanoma. Gab2 protein expression correlated with clinical melanoma progression, and higher levels of expression were seen in metastatic melanomas compared with primary melanoma and melanocytic nevi. We found that overexpression of Gab2 potentiates, whereas silencing of Gab2 reduces, migration and invasion of melanoma cells. Gab2 mediated the hyperactivation of Akt signaling in the absence of growth factors, whereas inhibition of the PI3K-Akt pathway decreased Gab2-mediated tumor cell migration and invasive potential. Gab2 overexpression resulted in enhanced tumor growth and metastatic potential in vivo. These studies demonstrate a previously undefined role for Gab2 in melanoma tumor progression and metastasis.
Promyelocytic leukemia zinc finger (PLZF) is a transcriptional repressor and tumor suppressor inhibiting melanoma cell growth in vitro and in vivo in animal models. In this study, we analyzed the impact of in vivo primary tumor gene expression of PLZF on the long-term survival of malignant melanoma patients. PLZF expression was assessed by using DNA microarray and real-time polymerase chain reaction analysis of 41 primary malignant melanomas from patients with a defined histology and a close to 20-year clinical follow-up, of 29 melanoma metastases, and of 6 different melanoma cell lines. Kaplan-Meier survival analyses, log-rank statistics and Cox regression analysis were employed to identify the impact of PLZF expression on long-term survival. We detected PLZF expression in 92% of primary melanoma tumors in vivo but not in melanoma cell lines in vitro. By univariate analysis, we identified: (1) PLZF mRNA expression < or = 10,000 mRNA copies/mug total tumor RNA, (2) Breslow tumor thickness >4 mm, and (3) American Joint Committee on Cancer stages IIC, IIIB, IIIC, and IV as statistically significant pretreatment risk factors. We defined a continuous prognostic index (i.e., risk score) for primary melanoma patients based on the regression coefficient of PLZF mRNA expression. Applying a cutpoint to the prognostic index at - 1.65, patients were assigned to one of two risk groups: low-risk patients (n = 28) with a median overall survival of 79 months (5-year survival of 61%) and high-risk patients (n = 13) with a median overall survival of 32 months (5-year survival of 23%) (p < 0.05). This is the first time that PLZF mRNA expression has been linked to a prognostic model for primary malignant melanoma patients to derive prognostic groups for clinical purposes (e.g., improved melanoma immunotherapies).
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