Publication date: December 2017
Source:Oral Oncology, Volume 75
Author(s): Subin Surendran, Gangotri Siddappa, Amrutha Mohan, Wesley Hicks, Vijayvel Jayaprakash, Christina Mimikos, Mohammed Mahri, Fatima Almarzouki, Kayla Morrell, Ravindra Ravi, Sindhu Govindan, C.N. Sushma, Nisheena Raghavan, Praveen Birur, Jeyaram Ilayaraja, Mihai Merzianu, Mary Reid, Amritha Suresh, Moni Abraham Kuriakose
ObjectiveThe purpose of this study was to determine association between cancer stem cells (CSCs) and their niche with progression of oral potentially malignant disorders.Materials and methodsPatients with histologically confirmed oral potentially malignant disorders, stratified into high/low risk lesions based on the degree of dysplasia and oral cancer were included in this study. Immunohistochemical profiling of markers of CSCs (CD44), endothelial cells (CD31) and CSC-vascular niche cross-talk (CXCR4 and SDF1) were carried out. Statistical analysis was performed to correlate the relationship of markers with histopathology grade (ANOVA, and χ2 test, unpaired t test) using GraphPad InStat v3.06.ResultsThe study included 550 samples (349 patients) and analysis showed progressive increase in expression levels of CSC and its niche markers with increase in grade of dysplasia as compared to the normal cohort (p < 0.05). Co-expression analysis revealed that, in comparison to the normal cohort, a larger percentage of patients showed increased expression of CD31 and CD44 (CD31high/CD44high; p < 0.05) and of CXCR4 and SDF1 (CXCR4high/SDF1high; p = 0.04), suggesting an association of the CSCs and the vascular niche. Further, distribution of patients with CD44high/CXCR4high (p < 0.05) and CD31high/SDF1high (p = 0.01) was significantly increased in the high-risk group (18%), suggesting a correlation between CD44+/CXCR4+ cells, the vascular niche and progression of oral dysplastic lesions.ConclusionThe increased expression of CSCs, the vascular niche and their cross talk markers are associated with increase in severity of dysplasia suggesting their role in the progression of oral potentially malignant disorders and may hence be used in identifying high-risk OPMD.
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