Clinical Relevance of Mortalin in Ovarian Cancer Patients

Cells. 2023 Feb 23;12(5):701. doi: 10.3390/cells12050701.

Abstract

Background: Ovarian cancer (OC) is the most lethal malignancy of the female reproductive tract. Consequently, a better understanding of the malignant features in OC is pertinent. Mortalin (mtHsp70/GRP75/PBP74/HSPA9/HSPA9B) promotes cancer development, progression, metastasis, and recurrence. Yet, there is no parallel evaluation and clinical relevance of mortalin in the peripheral and local tumor ecosystem in OC patients. Methods: A cohort of 92 pretreatment women was recruited, including 50 OC patients, 14 patients with benign ovarian tumors, and 28 healthy women. Blood plasma and ascites fluid-soluble mortalin concentrations were measured by ELISA. Mortalin protein levels in tissues and OC cells were analyzed using proteomic datasets. The gene expression profile of mortalin in ovarian tissues was evaluated through the analysis of RNAseq data. Kaplan-Meier analysis was used to demonstrate the prognostic relevance of mortalin. Results: First, we found upregulation of local mortalin in two different ecosystems, i.e., ascites and tumor tissues in human OC compared to control groups. Second, abundance expression of local tumor mortalin is associated with cancer-driven signaling pathways and worse clinical outcome. Third, high mortalin level in tumor tissues, but not in the blood plasma or ascites fluid, predicts worse patient prognosis. Conclusions: Our findings demonstrate a previously unknown mortalin profile in peripheral and local tumor ecosystem and its clinical relevance in OC. These novel findings may serve clinicians and investigators in the development of biomarker-based targeted therapeutics and immunotherapies.

Keywords: EMT; OXPHOS; RNAseq; biomarker; metastasis; mortalin/mtHsp70/GRP75/PBP74/HSPA9/HSPA9B; ovarian cancer; recurrence; stemness.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Ascites
  • Clinical Relevance
  • Ecosystem*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Ovarian Neoplasms*
  • Proteomics

Substances

  • mortalin

Grants and funding

This work was supported in part by research grants from the National Science Center (Preludium 16 2018/31/N/NZ2/02338 to K. Okła and Opus 19 2020/37/B/NZ5/01984 to J. Kotarski).