Mizrahi, I.Mazeh, H.Grinbaum, R.Beglaibter, N.Wilschanski, M.Pavlov, V.Adileh, M.Stojadinovic, A.Avital, I.Gure, A. O.Halle, D.Nissan, A.2016-02-082016-02-0820151837-9664http://hdl.handle.net/11693/23392Background: Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) have been shown to have functional roles in cancer biology and are dys-regulated in many tumors. Colon Cancer Associated Transcript -1 (CCAT1) is a lncRNA, previously shown to be significantly up-regulated in colon cancer. The aim of this study is to determine expression levels of CCAT1 in gastric carcinoma (GC). Methods: Tissue samples were obtained from patients undergoing resection for gastric carcinoma (n=19). For each patient, tumor tissue and normal appearing gastric mucosa were taken. Normal gastric tissues obtained from morbidly obese patients, undergoing laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy served as normal controls (n=19). A human gastric carcinoma cell line (AGS) served as positive control. RNA was extracted from all tissue samples and CCAT1 expression was analyzed using quantitative real time-PCR (qRT-PCR). Results: Low expression of CCAT1 was identified in normal gastric mucosa samples obtained from morbidly obese patients [mean Relative Quantity (RQ) = 1.95±0.4]. AGS human gastric carcinoma cell line showed an elevated level of CCAT1 expression (RQ=8.02). Expression levels of CCAT1 were approximately 10.8 fold higher in GC samples than in samples taken from the negative control group (RQ=21.1±5 vs. RQ=1.95±0.4, respectively, p<0.001). Interestingly, CCAT1 expression was significantly overexpressed in adjacent normal tissues when compared to the negative control group (RQ = 15.25±2 vs. RQ=1.95±0.4, respectively, p<0.001). Tissues obtained from recurrent GC cases showed the highest expression levels (RQ = 88.8±31; p<0.001). Expression levels increased with tumor stage (T4- 36.4±15, T3- 16.1±6, T2- 4.7±1), however this did not reach statistical significance (p=0.2). There was no difference in CCAT1 expression between intestinal and diffuse type GC (RQ=22.4±7 vs. 22.4±16, respectively, p=0.9). Within the normal gastric tissue samples, no significant difference in CCAT1 expression was observed in helicobacter pylori negative and positive patients (RQ= 2.4±0.9 vs. 0.93±0.2, respectively, p=0.13). Conclusion: CCAT1 is up-regulated in gastric cancer, and may serve as a potential bio-marker for early detection and surveillance.EnglishBiomarkerCCAT1GastrectomyGastric cancerLong non-coding RNAColon cancer associated transcript 1Long untranslated RNAUnclassified drugAdultAgedArticleCancer stagingCancer surgeryCarcinoma cell lineClinical articleControlled studyFemaleGene expressionGene overexpressionHelicobacter pyloriHumanHuman tissueLaparoscopic surgeryMaleMiddle agedMorbid obesityQuantitative analysisReal time polymerase chain reactionRNA extractionSleeve gastrectomyStomach adenocarcinomaStomach carcinomaStomach mucosaVery elderlyColon cancer associated transcript-1 (CCAT1) expression in adenocarcinoma of the stomachArticle10.7150/jca.10568