Inhibition of CRC cell migration and invasion is also evident through reversal of EMT by increases in E-cadherin expression and decreases in vimentin expression.
Moreover clinical data showed that the LINC01133 expression was positively correlated with E-cadherin, and negatively correlated with Vimentin, and there was a robust association of low LIINC01133 expression in tumors with poor survival in CRC samples.
The aim of the present study was to evaluate the aberrant gain of methylation in the gene promoters of VIM, TFPI2 and ITGA4 as putative early markers in the development from inflamed tissue via precancerous lesions toward colorectal cancer.
The expression levels of BPTF and vimentin in CRC paraffin-embedded specimens were significantly higher than the expression in NATs (P < 0.01), while the expressions of E-cadherin in tumors were obviously lower than in NATs (P < 0.01).
Pathway reconstruction and protein-protein networking of identified proteins predicted only Vimentin to be physically and genetically engaged in close proximity with the most established colorectal cancer associated tumorigenic pathways.
The expression of YB‑1 and three EMT‑related proteins (E‑cadherin, N‑cadherin and vimentin) was analyzed in 80 CRC and matched normal tissue samples, by immunohistochemistry.
CXCR4 expression was associated with β-catenin expression in CRC tissues, whereas high CXCR4 expression was strongly associated with low E-cadherin, high N-cadherin, and high vimentin expression, suggesting a cross talk between the SDF-1/CXCR4 axis and Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway in CRC.
Unexpectedly, even CRCs displaying diffuse nuclear INI1 staining (33%) show an adverse prognosis and vimentin over-expression, in comparison with the low expressing group (56%).
Overexpression of miR-200c in CRC cell lines caused reduced expression of putative gene targets, and resulted in increased E-cadherin and reduced vimentin expression.
Our data provide novel evidence for the biological and clinical significance of Slug and Vimentin expression as potential predictive biomarkers for identifying patients with lymph node metastasis or poor prognosis in CRC.
We also compared the methylation levels of these three novel hypermethylated genes with those of vimentin and SEPT9, well-known hypermethylated genes in CRC, and found that methylated PHOX2B, FGF12 and GAD2 were better than methylated vimentin and SEPT9 in differentiating CRC cancer tissue from non-cancer tissue.
We demonstrated, for the first time, that SOX2 is involved in the Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition (EMT) process as knock downof SOX2 in colorectal cancer (CRC) SW620 cells induced a Mesenchymal-Epithelial Transition (MET) process with recognized changes in the expression of key genes involved in the EMT process including E-cadherin and vimentin.
Indeed, the presence of neuropilin-2 in colorectal carcinoma cell lines was correlated with loss of epithelial markers such as cytokeratin-20 and E-cadherin and with acquisition of mesenchymal molecules such as vimentin.
The introduction of major EMT regulators (Slug and Twist) into CRC cell lines reduced the levels of E-cadherin and induced fibronectin and vimentin, but unlike L1, Slug and Twist expression was insufficient for conferring metastasis.
Interestingly, methylation was significantly found in the serum of patients with liver metastasis, peritoneal dissemination, and distant metastasis (p = 0.026, p = 0.0029 and p = 0.0063, respectively), suggesting that vimentin methylation in serum might be detected more frequently in patients with advanced colorectal cancer.
The methylated methylguanine DNA methyltransferase, human Mut L homolog-1, and vimentin were detected in 51.7%, 30.0%, and 38.3% of colorectal cancer, and in 36.5%, 11.%, and 15.4% of colorectal adenomas, respectively.
Four genes specifically methylated in colorectal cancer [bone morphogenetic protein 3 (BMP3), EYA2, aristaless-like homeobox-4 (ALX4), and vimentin] were selected from 41 candidate genes and evaluated on 74 cancers, 62 adenomas, and 70 normal epithelia.
With MBD enrichment, methylated vimentin was detected in stools enriched with >/=10 ng of cancer cell DNA and in CRC stool with a range of native human DNA amounts from 4 to 832 ng.
Twenty-three ovarian metastases from colorectal carcinomas and 23 primary ovarian carcinomas were evaluated clinicopathologically and immunostained with antigastric M1 antigen, cathepsin E, CA125, vimentin, estrogen and progesterone receptors, cytokeratins 7 and 20, and alpha-inhibin antibodies.