To better understand the role of beta-catenin mutation in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), we correlated the gene mutation with hepatitis virus B (HBV) and hepatitis virus C (HCV) status and the clinicopathological features in 366 patients with resected primary unifocal HCC. beta-Catenin mutations were also analyzed in 55 patients with multifocal HCC (68 tumors). Of the whole series, 57 (13.1%) of 434 tumors examined had beta-catenin mutations, 34 occurred at the serine/threonine residues of the GSK-3beta region of beta-catenin. Outside the GSK-3beta phosphorylation site, codons 32 and 34 were two mutational hot spots (17 tumors). The non-HBV-related HCC that was predominantly HCV related had a higher frequency of mutation (P: < 0.00001) and more frequent mutations at codon 45 than HBV-related HCC. HBV-related HCC had a younger mean age (P: < 0.00001), and higher male-to-female ratio (P: < 0.003) and positive familial history of HCC (P: < 0.014). Among 366 unifocal HCCs selected for clinicopathological analysis, beta-catenin mutations were associated with grade I (P: = 0.005) and stage I and II HCC (P: < 0.0001), and a better 5-year survival rate (P: = 0. 00003). These findings suggest mechanisms for beta-catenin mutations differ between HBV-related and non-HBV-related HCCs, and that beta-catenin mutation is a favorable prognostic factor related to low stage. beta-Catenin mutation was associated with nuclear expression of the protein (P: < 0.00001), but we failed to detect point or large fragment deletion mutation in 39 HCCs with nuclear beta-catenin expression, presumably wild-type protein. HCCs expressing mutant nuclear beta-catenin had a better 5-year survival rate (P: < 0.007), suggesting that mutant and wild-type nuclear beta-catenin proteins are not functionally equivalent and deserve more studies for further clarification.
The alpha9-nAChR is important for nicotine-induced transformation of normal human breast epithelial cells.
Enolase-alpha (ENO-1) is a key glycolytic enzyme that has been used as a diagnostic marker to identify human lung cancers. To investigate the role of ENO-1 in breast cancer diagnosis and therapy, the mRNA levels of ENO-1 in 244 tumor and normal paired tissue samples and 20 laser capture-microdissected cell clusters were examined by quantitative real-time PCR analysis. Increased ENO-1 mRNA expression was preferentially detected in estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) tumors (tumor/normal ratio >90-fold) when compared to ER-negative (tumor/normal ratio >20-fold) tumor tissues. The data presented here demonstrate that those patients whose tumors highly expressed ENO-1 had a poor prognosis with greater tumor size (>2 cm, *P = .017), poor nodal status (N > 3, *P = .018), and a shorter disease-free interval (<==1 year, *P < .009). We also found that higher-expressing ENO-1 tumors confer longer distance relapse (tumor/normal ratio = 82.8-92.4-fold) when compared to locoregional relapse (tumor/normal ratio = 43.4-fold) in postsurgical 4-hydroxy-tamoxifen (4-OHT)-treated ER+ patients (*P = .014). These data imply that changes in tumor ENO-1 levels are related to clinical 4-OHT therapeutic outcome. In vitro studies demonstrated that decreasing ENO-1 expression using small interfering RNA (siRNA) significantly augmented 4-OHT (100 nM)-induced cytotoxicity in tamoxifen-resistant (Tam-R) breast cancer cells. These results suggest that downregulation of ENO-1 could be utilized as a novel pharmacological approach for overcoming 4-OHT resistance in breast cancer therapy.
Hypoxia and acidosis are microenvironmental selection forces during somatic evolution in breast carcinogenesis. The effect of cobalt chloride (CoCl(2))-induced hypoxia on the expression of hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-1alpha, glucose transporter 1 (GLUT1), and carbonic anhydrase IX (CAIX) was assessed in breast cancer cells derived from primary sites (HCC1395 and HCC1937) and metastatic sites (MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231) by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction and immunoblotting. We analyzed these proteins' expression in tissue samples from normal breast tissue, usual ductal hyperplasia (DH), atypical ductal hyperplasia (ADH), ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), and invasive ductal carcinoma (IDC) using immunohistochemistry. CAIX mRNA was expressed constitutively in MDA-MB-231 cells but not in the other three cell lines. CAIX mRNA expression was increased after CoCl(2)-induced hypoxia in all four breast cancer cell lines. The expression of HIF-1alpha and GLUT1 proteins was increased after CoCl(2)-induced hypoxia in all breast cancer cell lines tested. Hypoxia significantly increased CAIX protein expression in primary cancer cells but not in metastatic ones. HIF-1alpha was not expressed in benign breast tissue, whereas it was significantly expressed in DH, ADH, DCIS, and IDC (p < 0.001). GLUT1 and CAIX were expressed only in DCIS (56.8% and 25.0%) and IDC (44.1% and 30.5%), with higher expression in high grade DCIS than low/intermediate grade DCIS (79.2% vs. 30.0%, p = 0.001 and 37.5% vs. 10.0%, p = 0.036, respectively). High CAIX expression was significantly associated with poor histological grade of IDC (p = 0.005). During breast carcinogenesis, the role of HIF-1alpha changes from response to proliferation to tumor progression. GLUT1 expression (glycolytic phenotype) and CAIX expression (acid-resistant phenotype) may result in a powerful adaptive advantage and represent an aggressive phenotype.
A recently described and rare variant of breast carcinoma, mucinous cystadenocarcinoma (MCA), is reported in a 65-year-old post-menopausal woman. She presented with a gradually enlarged breast tumor. A well-circumscribed tumor measuring about 3 cm in diameter was noted in the mammographic and ultrasonographic examinations. The mammographic and ultrasonographic findings were indistinguishable from more common mucinous carcinoma (colloid carcinoma) of the breast. The gross appearance of the tumor was well-defined and cystic, consisting of abundant transparent to bloody mucin, as well as whitish solid parts. Microscopically, the tumor was characterized by abundant extracellular and intracellular mucin. It looked like a mucinous cystic neoplasm of the ovary and pancreas. Particularly, few microscopic foci of ordinary intermediate-grade infiltrating ductal carcinoma (IDC) and ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) were observed around the main lesion in this case. A transition from ordinary DCIS to MCA in situ was found. It might indicate MCA derives from a metaplasia process of ordinary DCIS. MCA can be easily differentiated from mucinous carcinoma by quite different histologic and immunohistochemical findings. According to the previously reported and present cases, MCA of the breast more commonly affects elderly women and has a relatively favorable prognosis.
Primary adrenal lymphoma is extremely rare, accounting for o1% of non-Hodgkin lymphomas, and lymphomaassociated chromosomal translocations have yet to be reported in this entity. We performed a retrospective study of 10 cases in immunocompetent patients including 4 males and 6 females with a median age of 68 years. The most common presenting symptoms were abdominal pain and fever; unexpectedly, clinically evident adrenal insufficiency was detected only in one patient. The mean tumor size at diagnosis was 8.5 cm. Half of the patients had bilateral involvement. All cases presented with stage IE disease without regional nodal involvement. Histologically, eight cases were diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, all of which carried a nongerminal center B-cell phenotype. Fluorescence in situ hybridization revealed BCL6 gene rearrangement in 5 (83%) of 6 diffuse large B-cell lymphomas investigated. The remaining cases were one case each of plasmablastic lymphoma and extranodal NK/T-cell lymphoma, nasal type, the first and third case of primary adrenal lymphoma of these particular lymphoma subtypes in the English literature, respectively. At a median follow-up of 4.5 months, 7 patients died of lymphoma, 1 died of an unrelated disease, 1 was alive with disease, and 1 was alive without disease. The prognosis of these patients was poor as compared with those with nodal diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. We speculate that the poor outcome of primary adrenal lymphoma might be related to the bulky tumor size at presentation, non-germinal center B-cell phenotype, and frequent BCL-6 gene rearrangement. Keywords: adrenal insufficiency; diffuse large B-cell lymphoma; NK/T-cell lymphoma; plasmablastic lymphoma; primary adrenal lymphoma; Taiwan Although secondary involvement of the adrenal glands by non-Hodgkin's lymphoma is not uncommon, primary adrenal lymphoma is extremely rare and accounts for o1% of all non-Hodgkin's lymphoma cases. 1 In the English literature, most of the papers on primary adrenal lymphomas are singlecase reports and literature reviews based on a small number of cases except two large series. [1][2][3][4][5] Up to half of the small number of reported patients with primary adrenal lymphoma were associated with adrenal insufficiency and there is a high rate of
beta-catenin has functions both in the cadherin-mediated cell adhesion system and in the signalling pathway that mediates dorsal axis patterning in the embryo; it has been shown to be aberrantly expressed or mutated in diverse types of human tumour, but the biological significance of this remains to be clarified. To elucidate the clinical implications of aberrant beta-catenin expression and the potential differences between mutant and wild-type beta-catenin protein expression in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), the protein expression was analysed by immunohistochemical staining, supplemented by the analysis of gene mutation. Among 372 unifocal primary HCCs, beta-catenin was detected in the tumour cell membrane alone in 272 tumours (group A) and also in the nuclei in 100 (group B). In group A, 148 tumours had decreased beta-catenin expression, but the reduction did not correlate with invasion or prognosis. When compared with group A, however, group B had significantly lower frequencies of hepatitis B surface antigen carrier (p=0.015), and alpha-fetoprotein elevation (p=0.0003), but more often had non-invasive HCC (p<0.001) and better survival (p=0.01). Nuclear beta-catenin expression strongly correlated with mutation of the gene (p<0.00001). In group B, HCC with mutant nuclear beta-catenin correlated positively with non-invasive (stage 1) tumour and inversely with portal vein tumour thrombi (stage 3 HCC), and had significantly better 5-year survival, p<0.001 and p<0.0003, respectively. These results suggest that beta-catenin mutation plays an important role in the tumourigenesis of a subset of HCC of good prognosis, and that mutant and wild-type nuclear beta-catenin proteins are not functionally equivalent.
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