Takafuji V A, Evans A, Lynch K R, Roche J K
Department of Internal Medicine, University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, VA, USA.
Prostaglandins Leukot Essent Fatty Acids. 2002 Jan;66(1):71-81. doi: 10.1054/plef.2001.0299.
Recent evidence suggests that prostanoids are an important participant in the pathobiology of gastric adenocarcinoma, but the location and identity of cells in tumor-adjacent gastric mucosa able to synthesize and/or bind specific prostanoids is not clear. Using probes for cyclooxygenase 1 and 2 mRNA and protein as well as for the EP family of PGE(2) receptors, we sought to define the biology of prostanoids in adjacent human gastric mucosa at the site of tumor invasion. In mucosa adjacent to an invasive gastric adenocarcinoma, expression of cyclooxygenase was prominent, with COX 1 primarily in mucosal T lymphocytes surrounding nests of tumor cells. Densitometry showed these tumor-adjacent cells had substantial levels of COX 1 immunoreactive protein (relative intensity, 3.2). Cyclooxygenase 2 was newly expressed among these cells as well, but was limited in number (<25% of cyclooxygenase-positive T lymphocytes) in tumor-adjacent mucosa. Further, CD3(+) mononuclear cells, adjacent to tumor, strongly expressed prostanoid receptor EP(4) (relative intensity, 8.0), but cells with this receptor were not evident in the tumor itself. In contrast, normal gastric mucosa showed a consistent and structured expression of cyclooxygenase and PGE(2) receptor immunoreactive protein among mucosal cells. Cyclooxygenase 1 and PGE(2) receptor EP(4) were expressed on mucosal CD3(+) T lymphocytes in the lumenal (upper) third of gastric mucosa; and prostanoid receptors EP(2), EP(3) and EP(4), on gastric epithelia lining gastric pits. In situ hybridization with COX cDNAs confirmed these findings, and neither COX 2-specific mRNA nor protein was detected in normal gastric tissue. Our studies suggest that synthetic machinery and receptors for PGE(2), prominently expressed by T lymphocytes in gastric mucosa at the boundary of normal mucosa with tumor cells, may play a central role in prostanoid-driven tumorigenesis of this tissue.
近期证据表明,前列腺素类物质是胃腺癌病理生物学过程中的重要参与者,但肿瘤邻近胃黏膜中能够合成和/或结合特定前列腺素类物质的细胞的位置和特性尚不清楚。我们使用环氧化酶1和2的mRNA及蛋白质探针以及前列腺素E2(PGE2)受体的EP家族探针,试图确定肿瘤侵袭部位相邻人胃黏膜中前列腺素类物质的生物学特性。在侵袭性胃腺癌相邻的黏膜中,环氧化酶表达显著,COX 1主要存在于肿瘤细胞巢周围的黏膜T淋巴细胞中。密度测定显示,这些肿瘤相邻细胞具有大量COX 1免疫反应蛋白(相对强度为3.2)。环氧化酶2在这些细胞中也有新表达,但在肿瘤相邻黏膜中的数量有限(占环氧化酶阳性T淋巴细胞的比例小于25%)。此外,肿瘤相邻的CD3(+)单核细胞强烈表达前列腺素受体EP(4)(相对强度为8.0),但肿瘤本身中未见有该受体的细胞。相比之下,正常胃黏膜在黏膜细胞中呈现环氧化酶和PGE2受体免疫反应蛋白的一致且有组织的表达。环氧化酶1和PGE2受体EP(4)在胃黏膜管腔(上部)三分之一的黏膜CD3(+) T淋巴细胞上表达;前列腺素受体EP(2)、EP(3)和EP(4)在胃小凹内衬的胃上皮细胞上表达。用COX cDNA进行原位杂交证实了这些发现,且在正常胃组织中未检测到COX 2特异性mRNA或蛋白质。我们的研究表明,在正常黏膜与肿瘤细胞边界的胃黏膜中,由T淋巴细胞显著表达的PGE2合成机制和受体可能在该组织前列腺素驱动的肿瘤发生中起核心作用。