The MYCN enigma: Significance of MYCN expression in neuroblastoma Journal Article


Authors: Tang, X. X.; Zhao, H.; Kung, B.; Kim, D. Y.; Hicks, S. L.; Cohn, S. L.; Cheung, N. K.; Seeger, R. C.; Evans, A. E.; Ikegaki, N.
Article Title: The MYCN enigma: Significance of MYCN expression in neuroblastoma
Abstract: MYCN amplification strongly predicts adverse outcome of neuroblastoma. However, the significance of MYCN expression in the clinical and biological behavior of neuroblastoma has been unclear. To address this question, we first examined the expression of MYCN in combination with TrkA (a favorable prognostic indicator of neuroblastoma) in 91 primary neuroblastoma by quantitative reverse transcription-PCR and investigated the relationship among patient survival, MYCN, and TrkA expressions. Three subsets of neuroblastoma were defined based on MYCN and TrkA expression. Neuroblastoma expressing the highest level of MYCN but little TrkA were MYCN-amplified cases, which had a 5-year survival of 9.3%. Interestingly, MYCN and TrkA expression showed a linear correlation (r = 0.5664, P < 0.00005) in neuroblastoma lacking MYCN amplification, and the 5-year survival of neuroblastoma patients with low MYCN and low TrkA expressions was 63.7%, whereas those with high expression of both had a 5-year survival of 88.1% (P < 0.00005). This nonlinear distribution of disease outcome relative to MYCN expression in neuroblastoma explains why MYCN expression is not predictive of neuroblastoma disease outcome by dichotomous division of the neuroblastoma cohort. However, high-level MYCN expression is associated with favorable outcome in neuroblastoma lacking MYCN amplification. Furthermore, forced expression of MYCN significantly suppresses growth of neuroblastoma cells lacking MYCN amplification by inducing apoptosis and enhancing favorable neuroblastoma gene expression. Collectively, these data suggest that high-level MYCN expression in neuroblastoma lacking MYCN amplification results in a benign phenotype. Thus, the high MYCN expression confers the opposite biological consequence in neuroblastoma, depending on whether or not MYCN is amplified. ©2006 American Association for Cancer Research.
Keywords: cancer survival; human cell; outcome assessment; neoplasm staging; phenotype; gene; reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction; cohort studies; gene amplification; cohort analysis; age factors; cell line, tumor; nuclear proteins; cancer inhibition; neuroblastoma; reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction; quantitative analysis; oncogene proteins; protein tyrosine kinase a; mycn gene; trka gene; receptor, trka
Journal Title: Cancer Research
Volume: 66
Issue: 5
ISSN: 0008-5472
Publisher: American Association for Cancer Research  
Date Published: 2006-03-01
Start Page: 2826
End Page: 2833
Language: English
DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.can-05-0854
PUBMED: 16510605
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Cited By (since 1996): 39" - "Export Date: 4 June 2012" - "CODEN: CNREA" - "Source: Scopus"
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  1. Nai-Kong Cheung
    648 Cheung