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Oncogenic function of angiopoietin-2 in vitro and its modulation of tumor progression in colorectal carcinoma.

Angiopoietin-2 (Ang-2) has been investigated in cancer primarily in terms of its angiogenic function, and its role as an oncogene has yet to be elucidated. The current study hypothesized that Ang-2 may be an oncogene and have a function in tumor progression. An investigation of the function of Ang-2 in the LoVo colorectal cancer (CRC) cell line in vitro, which expresses a high level of Ang-2, was performed by knocking down endogenous expression with a targeted short hairpin RNA. The aggressive phenotypic effects of Ang-2 on experimental and control group cells were assessed using cell proliferation, migration and invasion assays. The association between Ang-2 expression levels and clinicopathological factors was evaluated in 415 CRC tissues using immunohistochemistry. Suppressing Ang-2 expression decreased cellular proliferation, invasion and migration in an in vitro study. Ang-2 overexpression was observed in 46% of patients with CRC and was significantly associated with pT (P=0.048), pN (P<0.001), venous invasion (P=0.023), lymphatic invasion (P<0.001) and tumor-node-metastasis stage (P=0.022). Furthermore, Ang-2 overexpression was an independent prognostic factor in pN stages 1 and 2. These results reveal that Ang-2 may be an oncogene in colorectal carcinogenesis and its expression may exert aggressive phenotypic effects during tumor progression. In addition, Ang-2 expression may serve as a prognostic marker and a potential drug target.

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