Differential CRABP-II and FABP5 expression patterns and implications for medulloblastoma retinoic acid sensitivity
Abstract
Medulloblastoma (MB) cells exhibit different responses to retinoid acid (RA) for reasons that are poorly understood. RA signaling can be transduced by two approaches that are mediated by cellular retinoic acid-binding protein 2 (CRABP-II) as a tumor-suppressive pathway, and by fatty acid-binding protein 5 (FABP5) as a tumor-promoting pathway. The biological effects of RA on cancer cells are largely determined by the patterns of CRABP-II and FABP5 expression. This study aims to profile the statuses of CRABP-II and FABP5 expression in MB and to evaluate their correlation with RA sensitivities using RA-sensitive (Med-3) and RA-insensitive (UW228-2, UW228-3) MB cells. Our results show that CRABP-II is distinctly expressed and the level of FABP5 is extremely low in Med-3 cells, while the patterns of CRABP-II and FABP5 expression are reversed in UW228-2 and UW228-3 cells. RA up-regulates CRABP-II expression in Med-3 cells, whereas it up-regulates FABP5 expression in the other two cell lines. The FABP5-specific inhibitor BMS309403 increases the RA sensitivity of UW228-2 cells (p < 0.01). Tissue microarray-based immunohistochemical staining showed CRABP-II/FABP5 expression patterns in MB that were variable (CRABP-II−/FABP5−, CRABP-II−/FABP5+, CRABP-II+/FABP5− and CRABP-II+/FABP5+) and imbalanced (CRABP-II↑/FABP5↓ and CRABP-II↓/FABP5↑). MB cases exhibited patterns ofCRABP-II−/FABP5− (12.24%, 6/49), CRABP-II−/FABP5+ (30.61%, 15/49) or CRABP-II↓/FABP5↑ (12.24%, 6/49), implicating unresponsiveness or insensitivity to RA. In conclusion, the ratios of CRABP-II/FABP5 levels are closely related to the RA sensitivities of MB cells. The differential CRABP-II and FABP5 expression patterns are prospective parameters, and of potential value in personalized RA therapy for MB.