Inter-α-trypsin inhibitor heavy chain 5 (ITIH5) is supposed to be involved in extracellular matrix stability and thus may play a key role in the inhibition of tumor progression. The current study is the first to analyze in depth ITIH5 expression and DNA methylation, as well as its potential clinical impact in non-small-cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC). We examined ITIH5 mRNA expression in tumor and adjacent normal lung tissue specimens of NSCLC patients. In addition, methylation frequency of the ITIH5 promoter was investigated using methylation-specific PCR and pyrosequencing. Significance of our data was validated by independent data sets from The Cancer Genome Atlas and the Kaplan-Meier Plotter platform. Furthermore, ITIH5 protein expression was evaluated by immunohistochemistry utilizing a tissue microarray with 385 distinct lung tissue samples. Based on our tissue collections, ITIH5 mRNA expression was significantly decreased in NSCLC compared to normal lung tissue in line with an increased methylation frequency in lung cancer tissue. Independent TCGA data confirmed significant expression loss of ITIH5 in lung cancer concordant with ITIH5 promoter hypermethylation in NSCLC. Of interest, low ITIH5 mRNA expression was particularly found in the magnoid and squamoid ADC expression subtype, concordant with an unfavorable patients' outcome in squamoid as well as tobacco smoking ADC patients. In conclusion, ITIH5 may be a novel putative tumor suppressor gene in NSCLC with a potential molecular significance in the squamoid ADC subtype and further clinical impact for risk stratification of adenocarcinoma patients. In addition, ITIH5 may serve as a novel biomarker for prognosis of tobacco smoking ADC patients.
Keywords: DNA-methylation, non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC); ITIH5; biomarker; gene signature; intrinsic expression subtype.