Katsetos Christos D, Legido Agustin, Perentes Elias, Mörk Sverre J
Department of Pediatrics, Drexel University College of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
J Child Neurol. 2003 Dec;18(12):851-66; discussion 867. doi: 10.1177/088307380301801205.
The expression of the cytoskeletal protein class III beta-tubulin isotype is reviewed in the context of human central nervous system development and neoplasia. Compared to systemic organs and tissues, class III beta-tubulin is abundant in the brain, where it is prominently expressed during fetal and postnatal development. As exemplified in cerebellar neurogenesis, the distribution of class III beta-tubulin is neuron associated, exhibiting different temporospatial gradients in the neuronal progeny of the external granule layer versus the neuroepithelial germinal matrix of the velum medullare. However, transient expression of this protein is also present in the telencephalic subventricular zones comprising putative neuronal and/or glial precursor cells. This temporospatially restricted, potentially non-neuronal expression of class III beta-tubulin may have implications in the accurate identification of presumptive neurons derived from transplanted embryonic stem cells. In the adult central nervous system, the distribution of class III beta-tubulin is almost exclusively neuron specific. Altered patterns of expression are noted in brain tumors. In "embryonal"-type neuronal/neuroblastic tumors of the central nervous system, such as the medulloblastomas, class III beta-tubulin expression is associated with neuronal differentiation and decreased cell proliferation. In contrast, the expression of class III beta-tubulin in gliomas is associated with an ascending grade of histologic malignancy and with correspondingly high proliferative indices. Thus, class III beta-tubulin expression in neuronal or neuroblastic tumors is differentiation dependent, whereas in glial tumors, it is aberrant and/or represents "dedifferentiation" associated with the acquisition of glial progenitor-like phenotype(s). From a diagnostic perspective, the detection of class III beta-tubulin immunostaining in neoplastic cells should not be construed as categorical evidence of divergent neuronal differentiation in tumors, which are otherwise phenotypically glial. Because class III beta-tubulin is present in neoplastic but not in normal differentiated glial cells, the elucidation of molecular mechanisms responsible for the altered expression of this isotype may provide critical insights into the dynamics of the microtubule cytoskeleton in the growth and progression of gliomas.
本文在人类中枢神经系统发育和肿瘤形成的背景下,对细胞骨架蛋白III类β-微管蛋白亚型的表达进行了综述。与全身器官和组织相比,III类β-微管蛋白在大脑中含量丰富,在胎儿期和出生后发育过程中显著表达。以小脑神经发生为例,III类β-微管蛋白的分布与神经元相关,在外侧颗粒层的神经元后代与髓帆神经上皮生发基质中表现出不同的时空梯度。然而,这种蛋白在包含假定神经元和/或胶质前体细胞的端脑脑室下区也有短暂表达。III类β-微管蛋白这种时空受限的、潜在的非神经元表达可能对准确鉴定移植胚胎干细胞衍生的假定神经元有影响。在成体中枢神经系统中,III类β-微管蛋白的分布几乎完全是神经元特异性的。在脑肿瘤中可观察到表达模式的改变。在中枢神经系统的“胚胎型”神经元/神经母细胞瘤,如髓母细胞瘤中,III类β-微管蛋白的表达与神经元分化和细胞增殖减少有关。相反,III类β-微管蛋白在胶质瘤中的表达与组织学恶性程度的升高及相应的高增殖指数有关。因此,III类β-微管蛋白在神经元或神经母细胞瘤中的表达是分化依赖性的,而在胶质肿瘤中,它是异常的和/或代表与获得胶质前体样表型相关的“去分化”。从诊断角度看,肿瘤细胞中III类β-微管蛋白免疫染色的检测不应被视为肿瘤中不同神经元分化的确凿证据,否则这些肿瘤在表型上是胶质细胞性的。由于III类β-微管蛋白存在于肿瘤细胞而非正常分化的胶质细胞中,阐明负责这种亚型表达改变的分子机制可能为胶质瘤生长和进展过程中微管细胞骨架的动态变化提供关键见解。