Abstract:
Background: The signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT-3) is frequently
overexpressed in cancer cells, propagates tumorigenesis, and is a key regulator of immune
suppression in cancer patients. The presence of phosphorylated STAT-3 (p-STAT-3) in the tumor
can induce p-STAT-3 in tumor-associated immune cells that can return to the circulatory system.
We hypothesized that the number of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) displaying pSTAT-3
would be increased in glioma patients, which would correlate with the extent of tumorexpressed
p-STAT-3, and that higher p-STAT-3 levels in peripheral blood would correlate with a
higher fraction of immune-suppressive regulatory T cells (Tregs).
Methods: We measured the percentage of PBMCs displaying p-STAT-3 in 19 healthy donors and
45 patients with primary brain tumors. The level of p-STAT-3 in tumor tissue was determined by
immunohistochemistry. The degree of immune suppression was determined based on the fraction
of Tregs in the CD4 compartment.
Results: Healthy donors had 4.8 ± 3.6% of PBMCs that expressed p-STAT-3, while the mean
proportion of PBMCs displaying p-STAT-3 in patients with GBM was 11.8 ± 13.5% (P = 0.03). We
did not observe a correlation by Spearman correlation between the degree of p-STAT-3 levels in
the tumor and the percent of PBMCs displaying p-STAT-3. Furthermore, the percent of PBMCs
displaying p-STAT-3 in glioma patients was not directly correlated with the fraction of Tregs in the
CD4 compartment.
Conclusion: We conclude that the percent of PBMCs displaying p-STAT-3 may be increased in
malignant glioma patients.
Citation:
Humphries, W., Wang, Y., Qiao, W., Reina-Ortiz, C., Abou-Ghazal, M. K., Crutcher, L. M., ... & Weinberg, J. (2009). yuDetecting the percent of peripheral blood mononuclear cells displaying p-STAT-3 in malignant glioma patients. Journal of translational medicine, 7(1), 92.