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Title

The Clinical Effect of the Inhibitor of Apopotosis Protein Livin in Melanoma.

Authors

Lazar, Itay; Perlman, Riki; Lotem, Michal; Peretz, Tamar; Ben-Yehuda, Dina; Kadouri, Luna

Abstract

Objective: The inhibitor of apoptosis protein (IAP) livin is frequently overexpressed in melanoma. Livin binds caspases and thereby inhibits apoptosis. We found that caspases cleave livin to produce a truncated form with a paradoxical proapoptotic activity. Methods: We assessed the correlation of livin expression with survival among 114 melanoma patients treated with an autologous melanoma vaccine. In 52 patients, resection resulted in no evidence of disease (NED) and 62 remained with active disease (WAD). Protein levels were assessed using Western blot. Results: We found livin protein expression in 44/114 samples (38.4%). Median overall survival was 1.4 years in NED patients with high levels of livin protein, 8.4 years in those with low-intermediate levels and not reached in patients who did not express livin (p = 0.025). The corresponding overall survival was 2.3 years among WAD patients with high levels of livin protein, 11.3 years in those with low-intermediate levels and, paradoxically, only 4.0 years in patients who did not express livin (p = 0.012). Conclusion: Livin protein expression may play a role in the progression of melanoma and correlates with survival. A high level of the protein is associated with a poor prognosis. However, in WAD patients low to intermediate level of livin, rather than absence of the protein, is associated with a favorable prognosis. This is probably due to the paradoxical proapoptotic activity of this important regulator of apoptosis. Copyright © 2012 S. Karger AG, Basel

Subjects

MELANOMA; APOPTOSIS; PROTEINS; DRUG therapy; CARCINOGENESIS

Publication

Oncology, 2012, Vol 82, Issue 4, p197

ISSN

0030-2414

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1159/000334234

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