Overexpression of filamin-A protein is associated with aggressive phenotype and poor survival outcomes in NSCLC patients treated with platinum-based combination chemotherapy
Abstract:
An actin-binding protein filamin A connects the actin filament network to cell membrane receptors, and acts as a scaffold for various signaling pathways related to cancer growth and progression. Recently, it has been reported that filamin A is required for efficient regulation of early stages of DNA repair process. Moreover, some in vitro studies showed that the overexpression of filamin A determines resistance to various cytotoxic drugs, including cisplatin. We aimed to analyse the expression of filamin A protein in resected NSCLC (Non Small Cell Lung Cancer) specimens, to investigate the association of the level of filamin A protein expression and other clinicopathological features, and possible relationship between the expression of filamin A and survival outcome in NSCLC patients, treated with platinum-based combination chemotherapy. We performed filamin A protein immunohistochemistry on formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tissue sections from 135 NSCLC patients, using EP2405Y antibody against C-terminus of filamin A. Cytoplasmic, membranous and nuclear positivity of filamin A was evaluated semi-quantitatively and correlated with available clinicopathological data. Patients were divided into two groups for survival analysis (I group – patients treated with adjuvant platinum-based chemotherapy, II group – patients with surgical treatment only). We found significant positive correlation between filamin A protein expression and NSCLC stage (r=0.249; pThus, filamin A expression might be a new prognostic marker in patients with NSCLC.