SCG3 Transcript in Peripheral Blood Is a Prognostic Biomarker for REST-Deficient Small Cell Lung Cancer

  1. Adrian C. Moss1,2,3,
  2. Gregory M. Jacobson1,
  3. Lauren E. Walker1,
  4. Neil W. Blake2,
  5. Ernie Marshall3 and
  6. Judy M. Coulson1
  1. Authors' Affiliations:1Physiological Laboratory, School of Biomedical Sciences, and 2Division of Medical Microbiology, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, United Kingdom and 3Clatterbridge Centre for Oncology NHS Trust, Wirral, United Kingdom
  1. Requests for reprints:
    Judy M. Coulson, Physiological Laboratory, School of Biomedical Sciences, University of Liverpool, Crown Street, Liverpool L69 3BX, United Kingdom. Phone: 44-151-794-5850; Fax: 44-151-794-4434; E-mail: j.m.coulson{at}liv.ac.uk.

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.

Footnotes

  • 4 S. Ahmed, J.M. Coulson, and P.J. Woll, unpublished data.

  • 5 G.M. Jacobson, B.S. Lane, L.E. Walker, J.M. Coulson. REST/NRSF controls neuroendocrine and oncogenic transcriptional programs in lung cancer. In preparation.

  • Grant support: Clatterbridge Cancer Research Trust grant CCO 2003/01 (A.C. Moss, J.M. Coulson, N.W. Blake, and E. Marshall) and Cancer Research UK project grant C8737/A3246 (J.M. Coulson and G.M. Jacobson).

  • The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked advertisement in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

  • Note: Supplementary data for this article are available at Clinical Cancer Research Online (http://clincancerres.aacrjournals.org/).

    • Accepted September 7, 2008.
    • Received May 6, 2008.
    • Revision received August 11, 2008.
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