- Gene Expression Profiling Revealed 2 Types of Bronchial Basal Cell Hyperplasia and Squamous Metaplasia With Different Progression Potentials.
Gene Expression Profiling Revealed 2 Types of Bronchial Basal Cell Hyperplasia and Squamous Metaplasia With Different Progression Potentials.
The premalignant process preceding squamous cell lung cancer is not inevitable; it can stop at any of the bronchial lesions: basal cell hyperplasia (BCH), squamous metaplasia (SM), and dysplasia and then progress or regress. At present, the mechanisms underlying the progression of the bronchial lesions remain undefined. Previously, we hypothesized that bronchial lesions that presented individually or combined with each other in the bronchi of lung cancer patients mirror the different "scenarios" of the premalignant process: individual BCH-the stoppage at the stage of hyperplasia, BCH plus SM-the progression of hyperplasia to metaplasia, and SM plus dysplasia-the progression of metaplasia to dysplasia. In this study, we analyzed gene expression profiles of BCH, SM, and dysplasia depending on their cooccurrence in the bronchi of lung cancer patients. The immune response gene expression was found to be a key difference between the individual BCH and BCH combined with SM lesions and a potential mechanism that determines the progression of hyperplasia to metaplasia. Upregulation of the cell cycle and downregulation of the cilium assembly genes mainly distinguished SM that copresented with dysplasia from SM that copresented with BCH and is a probable mechanism of the progression of metaplasia to dysplasia. Dysplasia showed mainly overexpression of the cell division genes and underexpression of the inflammation genes. Thus, this study demonstrates the significant gene expression differences between the premalignant lesions depending on their cooccurrence in the bronchi and sheds light on the mechanisms of the precancerous process preceding squamous cell lung cancer.