SARI is associated with the risk for several cancers, and loss of SARI expression is frequently found in aggressive and metastatic cancer. Limited evidence shows that SARI is a tumor suppressor gene, but the role of SARI in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) has not been previously reported. This study was to investigate the SARI expression profile in surgically resected lung cancer tissues of Chinese patients by immunohistochemistry and evaluate the relationship between SARI expression and prognosis of lung cancer patients. Furthermore, SARI gene was transfected into lung cancer cells (A549), and the growth curve and cell healing of lung cancer cells were determined, aiming to investigate the influence of SARI on the growth and migration of lung cancer cells in vitro. Results showed that 103 of 195 (52.82%) tissues were positive for SARI. When compared with normal tissues, SARI expression significantly reduced in 50.26% of NSCLC tissues. Patients with negative or reduced SARI expression were more likely to have advanced lung cancer and lymph node metastasis. In squamous carcinoma and adenocarcinoma patients, the SARI expression had no relation with the survival time; However in one-on-one analysis SARI expression in tumor cells and adjacent tissues, patients which tumor cells SARI express reduced than adjacent tissues, survival time was significantly shorter than those without reduction in SARI expression (Log Rank test, p = 0.001). After transfection by SARI gene, the proliferation and migration of A549 cells were obviously inhibited (p < 0.001). These results demonstrate that decreased SARI expression may predict a poor prognosis in NSCLC patients, and SARI may serve as a prognostic biomarker and potential therapeutic target for lung cancer.
Keywords: SARI; non-small cell lung cancer; prognosis; surgically resected cancer.