» Articles » PMID: 19118055

SCG3 Transcript in Peripheral Blood is a Prognostic Biomarker for REST-deficient Small Cell Lung Cancer

Overview
Journal Clin Cancer Res
Specialty Oncology
Date 2009 Jan 2
PMID 19118055
Citations 33
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Purpose: Specific markers of circulating tumor cells may be informative in managing lung cancer. Because the RE-1 silencing transcription factor (REST/NRSF) is a transcriptional repressor that is inactivated in neuroendocrine lung cancer, we identified REST-regulated transcripts (CHGA, CHGB, SCG3, VGF, and PCSK1) for evaluation as biomarkers in peripheral blood.

Experimental Design: Transcripts were screened across lung cancer and normal cell lines. Candidates were assessed by reverse transcription-PCR and hybridization of RNA extracted from the peripheral blood of 111 lung cancer patients obtained at clinical presentation and from 27 cancer-free individuals.

Results: Expression profiling revealed multiple chromogranin transcripts were readily induced on REST depletion, most notably SCG3 was induced >500-fold. The SCG3 transcript was also overexpressed by 12,000-fold in neuroendocrine compared with nonneuroendocrine lung cancer cells. In peripheral blood of lung cancer patients and cancer-free individuals, we found that SCG3 was more tumor-specific and more sensitive than other chromogranin transcripts as a biomarker of circulating tumor cells. Overall, 36% of small cell lung cancer (SCLC) and 16% of non-SCLC patients scored positively for normalized SCG3 transcript. This correlated with worse survival among SCLC patients with limited disease (n = 33; P = 0.022) but not extensive disease (n = 29; P = 0.459). Interestingly, the subcohort of 6 SCLC patients with resistance to platinum/etoposide chemotherapy all scored positively for peripheral blood SCG3 transcript (P = 0.022).

Conclusions: SCG3 mRNA, a component of the REST-dependent neurosecretory transcriptional profile, provides a sensitive prognostic biomarker for noninvasive monitoring of neuroendocrine lung cancer.

Citing Articles

Secretogranin III: a promising therapeutic target for intraocular neovascular lesions.

Yuan C, Zuo L, Dong Y, Liu B, Qi H Int Ophthalmol. 2025; 45(1):26.

PMID: 39832055 PMC: 11746947. DOI: 10.1007/s10792-024-03393-2.


REST Is Not Resting: REST/NRSF in Health and Disease.

Jin L, Liu Y, Wu Y, Huang Y, Zhang D Biomolecules. 2023; 13(10).

PMID: 37892159 PMC: 10605157. DOI: 10.3390/biom13101477.


Exploring Immune-Related Prognostic Signatures in the Tumor Microenvironment of Colon Cancer.

Cao L, Li T, Ba Y, Chen E, Yang J, Zhang H Front Genet. 2022; 13:801484.

PMID: 35281839 PMC: 8907673. DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2022.801484.


Loss of REST in breast cancer promotes tumor progression through estrogen sensitization, MMP24 and CEMIP overexpression.

Cloud A, Vargheese A, Gunewardena S, Shimak R, Ganeshkumar S, Kumaraswamy E BMC Cancer. 2022; 22(1):180.

PMID: 35177031 PMC: 8851790. DOI: 10.1186/s12885-022-09280-2.


Comparative ligandomics implicates secretogranin III as a disease-restricted angiogenic factor in laser-induced choroidal neovascularization.

Ji L, Waduge P, Wan W, Tian H, Li J, Zhang J FEBS J. 2022; 289(12):3521-3534.

PMID: 35038348 PMC: 9232851. DOI: 10.1111/febs.16356.