» Articles » PMID: 17178872

Human Kallikrein 8 Protease Confers a Favorable Clinical Outcome in Non-small Cell Lung Cancer by Suppressing Tumor Cell Invasiveness

Overview
Journal Cancer Res
Specialty Oncology
Date 2006 Dec 21
PMID 17178872
Citations 23
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The human kallikrein 8 (KLK8) gene, a member of the human tissue kallikrein gene family, encodes a serine protease. The KLK8 protein (hK8) is known to be a favorable prognostic marker in ovarian cancer, but the biological basis of this is not understood. We found that overexpressing the KLK8 gene in highly invasive lung cancer cell lines suppresses their invasiveness. This role in invasiveness was further confirmed by the fact that inhibition of endogenous KLK8 expression with a specific short hairpin RNA reduced cancer cell invasiveness. In situ degradation and cell adhesion assays showed that proteins produced from KLK8 splice variants modify the extracellular microenvironment by cleaving fibronectin. DNA microarray experiments and staining of cells for actin filaments revealed that the degradation of fibronectin by hK8 suppresses integrin signaling and retards cancer cell motility by inhibiting actin polymerization. In addition, studies in a mouse model coupled with the detection of circulating tumor cells by quantitative PCR for the human Alu sequence showed that KLK8 suppresses tumor growth and invasion in vivo. Finally, studies of clinical specimens from patients with non-small cell lung cancer showed that the time to postoperative recurrence was longer for early-stage patients (stages I and II) with high KLK8 expression (mean, 49.9 months) than for patients with low KLK8 expression (mean, 22.9 months). Collectively, these findings show that KLK8 expression confers a favorable clinical outcome in non-small cell lung cancer by suppressing tumor cell invasiveness.

Citing Articles

Tumor-derived KLK8 predicts inferior survival and promotes an immune-suppressive tumor microenvironment in lung squamous cell carcinoma.

Tian H, Wei R, Xiao C, Fan T, Che Y, Liu T BMC Pulm Med. 2024; 24(1):53.

PMID: 38273291 PMC: 10809653. DOI: 10.1186/s12890-023-02770-4.


Minireview: functional roles of tissue kallikrein, kinins, and kallikrein-related peptidases in lung cancer.

Stuardo-Parada A, Lopez-Munoz R, Villarroel-Espindola F, Figueroa C, Ehrenfeld P Med Oncol. 2023; 40(8):224.

PMID: 37405520 DOI: 10.1007/s12032-023-02090-x.


Investigation on substrate specificity and catalytic activity of serine protease neuropsin.

Lintuluoto M, Abe M, Horioka Y, Fukunishi Y, Tamura H, M Lintuluoto J Biophys Physicobiol. 2022; 19:e190040.

PMID: 36349321 PMC: 9592888. DOI: 10.2142/biophysico.bppb-v19.0040.


Dissecting the ferroptosis-related prognostic biomarker and immune microenvironment of driver gene-negative lung cancer.

Zhou R, Ma H, Liu Y, Chen X, Chang X, Chen Y Exp Biol Med (Maywood). 2022; 247(16):1447-1465.

PMID: 35762414 PMC: 9493762. DOI: 10.1177/15353702221102872.


Impact of native and external factors on exosome release: understanding reactive exosome secretion and its biogenesis.

Hariharan H, Kesavan Y, Raja N Mol Biol Rep. 2021; 48(11):7559-7573.

PMID: 34626311 DOI: 10.1007/s11033-021-06733-y.