Aims: Angioarrestin is a recently isolated gene, which has a novel function as an angiogenesis inhibitor. Angiogenesis plays an important role in tumorigenesis. It has been reported that the angioarrestin expression was decreased in lung cancer. We attempted to determine the influence of angioarrestin expression on clinicopathological features in patients with lung cancer who had undergone surgery.
Methods: Expression of angioarrestin messenger RNA was evaluated by a quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) in 93 lung carcinomas and adjacent histological normal lung samples using LightCycler.
Results: Angioarrestin/GAPDH mRNA expression was significantly decreased in the tumor of lung cancer tissue (86.676+/-123.505) than in the normal lung tissue (1154.218+/-2003.508, p<0.0001), although only four lung cancer tissues had more than one tumor/normal ratio of angioarrestin/GAPDH mRNA expression. There was no relationship between angioarrestin gene expression and age, gender or T-status. However, decreased angioarrestin/GAPDH expression was especially seen at stage I lung cancer (54.156+/-62.783) when compared to stage II-IV lung cancer (110.315+/-151.359, p=0.0316). Decreased angioarrestin/GAPDH expression was especially seen at N0 lung cancer (56.396+/-69.941) when compared to N2 lung cancer (137.522+/-180.489, p=0.0362).
Conclusions: The decreased expression of angioarrestin mRNA was the early phase phenomena for tumor progression from lung cancer. Alternatively, loss of antianiogenesis might play a role in oncogenesis for lung cancer.