Jr. Gnarra et Gr. Dressler, EXPRESSION OF PAX-2 IN HUMAN RENAL-CELL CARCINOMA AND GROWTH-INHIBITION BY ANTISENSE OLIGONUCLEOTIDES, Cancer research, 55(18), 1995, pp. 4092-4098
Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is the most common malignancy in the adult
kidney. Because RCC is generally thought to arise from the epithelium
of the proximal tubules, the expression of Pax-2, a gene required for
renal epithelium development, was examined in primary tumors and tumor
-derived cell lines. Immunostaining of frozen sections from the primar
y tumors indicated Pax-2 expression in the malignant cells but not in
the surrounding stroma. In a panel of human RCC-derived cell lines, 73
% expressed Pax-2 protein and mRNA. Treatment of RCC cell lines with a
ntisense oligodeoxynucleotides resulted in down-regulation of Pax-2 pr
otein expression and growth inhibition after 3 days in culture. These
data indicate that Pax-2 gene function is required for proliferation,
as well as differentiation during embryonic development, and suggest a
novel therapy for RCC.