A cell line designated "HIBSPP" was established from a human malignant choroids plexus papilloma of 29-year-old Japanese woman. This line grew well without interruption for 3 years and was subcultivated over 70 times. The cells were spindle, oval, and polygonal in shape, and neoplastic and pleomorphic features, a jigsaw puzzle-like arrangement, multilayering and forming papillary structures without contact inhibition. The cells proliferated slowly, and the population doubling time was about 69 hours. The chromosome number showed a wide distribution of aneuploidy. The mode was in the hypotetraploid range, and many marker chromosomes were observed. The culture cells were easily transplanted into the subcutis of nude mice and produced the tumor resembling the original tumor.
Malignant tumors usually involve a relatively hypoxic state, which induces overexpression of hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha (HIF-1alpha) to satisfactorily enable the tumor to survive. Thus, inhibition of the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway including HIF-1alpha is expected to play a major role in suppression of tumor cell growth, having recently drawn much attention as an anti-cancer therapeutic strategy for various malignant tumors. In the present study, which compared clear cell adenocarcinoma (CLA) of the ovary with serous adenocarcinoma (SEA), the immunohistochemical expression of mTOR, phosphorylated-mTOR (p-mTOR), HIF-1alpha, and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) was examined in surgically resected specimens of 29 SEA and 47 CLA. There were no significant differences in expression of mTOR, HIF-1alpha and VEGF between SEA and CLA, but it was noted that p-mTOR expression was more prominent in CLA than SEA. Then, using the cell lines of CLA (RMG-1 and W3uF), an experimental study was designed to clarify whether tumor suppression due to downregulation of mTOR activity could represent a promising therapeutic strategy for CLA. After treatment of an analogue of rapamycin (everolimus), expression of mTOR, p-mTOR, HIF-1alpha and VEGF was examined on western blot. As a result, although mTOR expression remained unchangeable, expression of p-mTOR, HIF-1alpha and VEGF was shown to be sharply depressed. The same expression alterations were demonstrated in the xenograft model treated with everolimus. In conclusion, mTOR-targeted therapy through usage of drugs such as everolimus may be more effective for CLA of the ovary because of its significant expression of p-mTOR.
Brain metastases of gynecological malignancies are rare, but the incidence is increasing. Patients with brain metastases have a poor prognosis, therefore early detection and optimal management is necessary. In order to determine a new biomarker, we aimed to identify proteins that associated with brain metastases. We investigated proteins associated with brain metastases of gynecological malignancies in three patients who underwent surgical resection (stage IIb cervical cancer, stage Ib endometrial cancer, and stage IIIb ovarian cancer). Proteomic analysis was performed on formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) samples of the primary tumors and brain metastases, which were analyzed by liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry. Thereafter, candidate proteins were identified by the Scaffold system and Mascot search program, and were analyzed using western blotting and immunohistochemistry. As a result, a total of 129 proteins were identified. In endometrial and ovarian cancers, western blotting revealed that the expression of alpha-enolase (ENO1) and triosephosphate isomerase (TPI-1) was higher and the expression of Transgelin-2 (TAGLN2) was lower in metastatic tumors than in primary tumors. On the other hand, the expression of TPI-1 and TAGLN2 was lower in metastatic tumors than in primary tumors in cervical cancer. Immunohistochemistry confirmed that ENO1 expression was elevated in the metastatic tumors compared with the primary tumors. In conclusion, the present study showed that FFPE tissue-based proteomics analysis can be powerful tool, and these findings suggested that ENO1, TPI-1, and TAGLN2 may have a role in the development and progression of brain metastasis from gynecological malignancies.
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