Investigator

Markus Morkel

Research Group Leader · Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Institute of Pathology

MMMarkus Morkel
Papers(1)
AHRR and SFRP2 in pri…
Collaborators(4)
David CapperDavid HorstEliane T TaubeIoana I. Braicu
Institutions(2)
Charit Universittsmed…Charité - Universität…

Papers

AHRR and SFRP2 in primary versus recurrent high-grade serous ovarian carcinoma and their prognostic implication

Abstract Background The aim of this study was to analyse transcriptomic differences between primary and recurrent high-grade serous ovarian carcinoma (HGSOC) to identify prognostic biomarkers. Methods We analysed 19 paired primary and recurrent HGSOC samples using targeted RNA sequencing. We selected the best candidates using in silico survival and pathway analysis and validated the biomarkers using immunohistochemistry on a cohort of 44 paired samples, an additional cohort of 504 primary HGSOCs and explored their function. Results We identified 233 differential expressed genes. Twenty-three showed a significant prognostic value for PFS and OS in silico. Seven markers (AHRR, COL5A2, FABP4, HMGCS2, ITGA5, SFRP2 and WNT9B) were chosen for validation at the protein level. AHRR expression was higher in primary tumours (p < 0.0001) and correlated with better patient survival (p < 0.05). Stromal SFRP2 expression was higher in recurrent samples (p = 0.009) and protein expression in primary tumours was associated with worse patient survival (p = 0.022). In multivariate analysis, tumour AHRR and SFRP2 remained independent prognostic markers. In vitro studies supported the anti-tumorigenic role of AHRR and the oncogenic function of SFRP2. Conclusions Our results underline the relevance of AHRR and SFRP2 proteins in aryl-hydrocarbon receptor and Wnt-signalling, respectively, and might lead to establishing them as biomarkers in HGSOC.

53Works
1Papers
4Collaborators

Positions

2023–

Research Group Leader

Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin · Institute of Pathology

2011–

Senior Scientist

Charité Universitätsmedizin Berlin · Institute of Pathology, Laboratory of Molecular Tumor Pathology

2005–

Research Group Leader

Max-Planck-Institut für molekulare Genetik · Developmental Genetics

1999–

Postdoctoral Researcher

Max Delbrück Centrum für Molekulare Medizin Berlin Buch