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Expression profiles and clinical relationships of ID2, CDKNIB, and CDKN2A in primary neuroblastoma S Gebauer A L. Lu M Omura-Minamisawa A Batova Mitchell B. Diccianni, Univ. of California San Diego
ABSTRACT: Despite considerable research into the etiology of neuroblastoma, the
molecular basis of this disease has remained elusive. In contrast to the
absence of expression of the known tumor suppressor CDKN2A (also known as p16
and INK4A) in a wide variety of tumor types we have found in previous studies
that CDKN2A protein is paradoxically highly expressed in many advanced stage
neuroblastomas and unrelated to RBI status. In the present study, we sought to
identify the mechanistic relationships that might influence CDKN2A expression
and negate its influence on tumor cell proliferation. In this regard, we
examined the role of the tumor-suppressor gene CDKNIB (also known as p27 and
Kip1) and the oncogene ID2 in relationship to CDKN2A expression, MYCN
amplification, and neuroblastoma pathogenesis in 17 neuroblastoma cell lines
and 129 samples of primary tumors of all stages. All neuroblastoma cell lines
expressed the ID2 transcript and protein. However, although the majority of
primary neuroblastomas also expressed the ID2 transcript, expression of the ID2
protein was undetectable or only barely detectable, regardless of transcript
expression. In both cell lines and primary tumors, ID2 expression was
independent of both CDKN2A and MYCN expression. In primary neuroblastomas,
CDKNIB protein was expressed in significantly fewer advanced-stage
neuroblastomas than early-stage neuroblastomas, but its expression had no
relationship with CDKN2A expression or MYCN amplification. We concluded that
the paradoxical expression of CDKN2A in neuroblastoma cannot be explained by
inactivation of the tumor-suppressor gene CDKNIB or overexpression of the
oncogene ID2. We further concluded that ID2 is not a target of MYCN regulation
nor is it a prognostic factor for neuroblastoma. Finally, the loss of CDKNIB in
advanced-stage neuroblastoma suggests this protein may play a role in the
neuroblastoma disease process. (C) 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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