The physiological effects of estrogen on the pituitary, including cellular proliferation and regulation of hormone synthesis, are mediated by the nuclear estrogen receptor (ER). The ER acts as a dimer to modulate gene transcription and contains specific functional domains encoded in different exons. Two separate, but related, forms of the receptor (ERalpha and ERbeta) exist, with distinct tissue and cell patterns of expression. Additional ER isoforms, generated by alternative messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) exon splicing, have been defined in several tissues and are postulated to play a role in tumorigenesis or in modulating the estrogen response. We examined 71 human pituitary adenomas of varying phenotypes and 6 normal pituitary specimens for ER mRNA forms by RT-PCR and hybridization blotting analysis. All prolactinomas (n = 14) contained ERalpha, and several contained ERbeta (5 of 14) mRNA. In comparison, 6 tumors that expressed PRL and GH expressed ERbeta (4 of 6) more frequently than ERalpha (3 of 6). ERbeta mRNA was also found more frequently in null cell (8 of 24 ERalpha and 14 of 24 ERbeta) and gonadotrope (13 of 21 ERalpha and 18 of 21 ERbeta) tumors. Additionally, ERbeta was found in 4 of 6 tumors that contained only GH, although ERalpha was not observed in this tumor type. Expression of the two ER forms within a tumor type was overlapping, but some tumors contained only 1 isoform. Expression of ERalpha mRNA splice variants also varied with cell type. All normal pituitaries contained ERalpha deletions of exon 4, 5, and 7, whereas only 2 of 6 samples contained the exon 2 deletion variant. Although the same ERalpha mRNA variants were observed among the various tumor types, the proportion of specific splice variants expressed varied. For example, most ER-positive prolactinomas expressed ERalpha variants with deletions of exon 2, 4, or 5, whereas gonadotropin tumors preferentially expressed the ERalpha exon 7 deletion variant. A novel ERbeta mRNA splice variant, missing exon 2, was observed in a majority of all ERbeta-positive tumors. Immunoblotting analysis of ERalpha and ERbeta proteins supported the mRNA results. Because ERalpha and ERbeta have different biological responses to selective ER modulators, and the ER deletion variants have biological effects distinct from those of the full-length ER, expression of these isoforms may influence the biological properties of these tumors and affect their ability to respond to estrogen and antiestrogen therapies.
Acromegaly is associated with an increased incidence of neoplasia thought to be related in part to tonic increases in circulating levels of insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1). Hemangiopericytomas, particularly those occurring in soft tissues, are known to possess IGF receptors. These tumors often behave aggressively and can be recalcitrant to surgery and radiation therapy. A 49-yr-old man presented with an erosive, midline scalp mass and cutis gyrata. Further diagnostic imaging and endocrinologic analysis confirmed two diagnoses: a hemangiopericytoma and acromegaly associated with an intrasellar pituitary tumor. Both the hemangiopericytoma and the pituitary adenoma were surgically resected; Western blot analysis confirmed the presence of IGF-1 receptors in the hemangiopericytoma. Two years later, the patient underwent resection of a right frontal hemangiopericytoma with an identical histologic phenotype and receptor positivity for IGF-1. The occurrence of a central nervous system hemangiopericytoma in patient with acromegaly is rare. Growth and recurrence of hemangiopericytoma may have been fostered by the presence of IGF-1 receptors. Paracrine mechanisms related to IGF-1 may have contributed to its pathogenesis and growth. The presence of IGF-1 receptors in hemangiopericytomas may have treatment implications for additional adjuvant therapies.
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