Placenta previa increta/percreta (I/P) is a severe form of invasive placentation associated with massive peripartum hemorrhage, which often requires Cesarean hysterectomy. The pathogenesis of invasive placentation is multidimensional, involving decidual deficiency, endomyometrial damage and excessively deep trophoblast invasion into the uterus. In this study, annealing control primer-polymerase chain reaction (ACP-PCR) was used to identify differentially expressed genes, which may impair placentation resulting in placenta previa I/P. Placental tissues from I/P and non-increta/percreta (non-I/P) sites were concomitantly collected from patients undergoing Cesarean hysterectomy. After ACP-PCR experiments (three patients), the differentially expressed bands, consistently showing up- or down-regulated trends between each of the I/P and non-I/P tissue pairs, were cloned and sequenced. Human non-protein coding metastasis associated lung adenocarcinoma transcript 1 (MALAT-1) gene was identified. Real-time quantitative PCR (10 patients) confirmed significant overexpression of MALAT-1 in I/P samples (P = 0.005). To investigate the role of MALAT-1 gene in the regulation of trophoblast cell invasion, targeting of MALAT-1 mRNA expression with short interfering RNA (siRNA) in trophoblast-like BeWo, JAR and JEG-3 choriocarcinoma cells was performed. The invasion ability of these cells was significantly suppressed after siRNA silencing (P < 0.001), and this was not correlated with abnormal MMP-2 and MMP-9 enzyme activities. Our results suggest that MALAT-1 expression in placenta previa I/P is increased and its down-regulation inhibits trophoblast-like cell invasion in vitro. MALAT-1 might be involved in regulating trophoblast invasion during the development of advanced invasive placentation.
KAI1 is a metastasis suppressor gene located on human chromosome 11p11.2. It belongs to a structurally distinct family of cell surface glycoproteins. Decreased KAI1 expression has been observed in several common solid epithelial tumors, including prostatic, pancreatic, lung, hepatic, colorectal, ovarian, and esophageal cancers. A recent study also observed frequent loss of KAI1 expression in a number of squamous cell carcinomas of the cervix by immunohistochemical technique. To further confirm whether this gene is altered in this malignancy, we analyzed KAI1 expression in various stages of cervical carcinoma by a molecular method. Total cellular RNA was extracted from 84 primary invasive cervical carcinomas and 6 metastatic or recurrent lesions. cDNA was synthesized and was used for real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction analysis. The level of KAI1 expression was obtained as the value of threshold cycle (Ct) and was quantitated with a comparative Ct method. In addition, paraffin blocks of the tumors were selected and prepared for immunohistochemical study with an anti-KAI1 polyclonal antibody, C-16. Both the real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction method and immunohistochemical study revealed a frequent decrease in KAI1 expression in invasive cervical cancers and metastatic or recurrent lesions. However, the reduction in KAI1 was not related to progression of the disease. When tumor cell differentiation was analyzed, poorly differentiated tumors showed a greater decrease in KAI1 expression than well or moderately differentiated tumors (P < 0.001). Histologically, KAI1 loss was observed equally in both squamous cell carcinoma and adeno-/adenosquamous carcinoma. Since down-regulation of KAI1 occurs in both early and late stages of cervical cancer, we suggest that its involvement in the progression of this malignancy is an early event.
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