Elevated levels of MMP12 sourced from macrophages are associated with poor prognosis in urothelial bladder cancer

Other authors

Institut Català de la Salut

[Kerzeli IK, Kostakis A] Department of Pharmacy, Science for Life Laboratory, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden. [Türker P, Malmström PU, Hemdan T] Department of Surgical Sciences, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden. [Mezheyeuski A] Department of Immunology, Genetics and Pathology, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden. Vall d’Hebron Institute of Oncology (VHIO), Barcelona, Spain

Vall d'Hebron Barcelona Hospital Campus

Publication date

2023-07-07T08:40:42Z

2023-07-07T08:40:42Z

2023-06-30



Abstract

Biomarkers; Proteomics; Urothelial bladder cancer


Biomarcadores; Proteómica; Cáncer de vejiga urotelial


Biomarcadors; Proteòmica; Càncer de bufeta urotelial


Background Urothelial bladder cancer is most frequently diagnosed at the non-muscle-invasive stage (NMIBC). However, recurrences and interventions for intermediate and high-risk NMIBC patients impact the quality of life. Biomarkers for patient stratification could help to avoid unnecessary interventions whilst indicating aggressive measures when required. Methods In this study, immuno-oncology focused, multiplexed proximity extension assays were utilised to analyse plasma (n = 90) and urine (n = 40) samples from 90 newly-diagnosed and treatment-naïve bladder cancer patients. Public single-cell RNA-sequencing and microarray data from patient tumour tissues and murine OH-BBN-induced urothelial carcinomas were also explored to further corroborate the proteomic findings. Results Plasma from muscle-invasive, urothelial bladder cancer patients displayed higher levels of MMP7 (p = 0.028) and CCL23 (p = 0.03) compared to NMIBC patients, whereas urine displayed higher levels of CD27 (p = 0.044) and CD40 (p = 0.04) in the NMIBC group by two-sided Wilcoxon rank-sum tests. Random forest survival and multivariable regression analyses identified increased MMP12 plasma levels as an independent marker (p < 0.001) associated with shorter overall survival (HR = 1.8, p < 0.001, 95% CI:1.3–2.5); this finding was validated in an independent patient OLINK cohort, but could not be established using a transcriptomic microarray dataset. Single-cell transcriptomics analyses indicated tumour-infiltrating macrophages as a putative source of MMP12. Conclusions The measurable levels of tumour-localised, immune-cell-derived MMP12 in blood suggest MMP12 as an important biomarker that could complement histopathology-based risk stratification. As MMP12 stems from infiltrating immune cells rather than the tumor cells themselves, analyses performed on tissue biopsy material risk a biased selection of biomarkers produced by the tumour, while ignoring the surrounding microenvironment.


Open access funding provided by Uppsala University. This work was supported by the Swedish Society for Medical Research (S15-0065) to S.M. and the Swedish Cancer Foundation (CAN 2017/199) to P-U. M. The funding bodies did not influence the research performed.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

BMC

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https://doi.org/10.1186/s12885-023-11100-0

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Rights

Attribution 4.0 International

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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