Campbell Jack Griffin, Miller Douglas C, Cundiff Diane D, Feng Qi, Litofsky N Scott
Department of Surgery, Division of Neurological Surgery, The University of Missouri School of Medicine, Columbia, Missouri USA.
Department of Pathology & Anatomical Sciences, The University of Missouri School of Medicine, M263 Medical Science Building, One Hospital Drive, Columbia, MO 65212 USA.
Springerplus. 2015 Feb 3;4:53. doi: 10.1186/s40064-015-0807-z. eCollection 2015.
It is well established that the normal human brain contains populations of neural stem/progenitor cells. Recent studies suggest that they migrate toward a variety of CNS tissue injuries. In an investigation of the potential role of neural stem cells in the pathogenesis of primary CNS lymphomas (NHL-CNS), we observed that neural stem/progenitor cells appeared to accumulate at the border of the tumors with the brain and in the advancing edge of the tumors, in a pattern similar to that seen with reactive gliosis. We identified neural stem/progenitor cells using standard immunohistochemical markers thereof, including CD133, nestin, Group II Beta-tubulin, Musashi1, and the transcription factor Sox2, in neurosurgically obtained specimens of NHL-CNS metastatic carcinoma , and metastatic melanoma . We had similar results with each of these markers but found that Sox2 antibodies provided the clearest and most robust labeling of the cells at the borders of these non-glial tumors. To exclude that the immunoreactive cells were actually neoplastic, double-label immunohistochemistry for Sox2 and CD20 (for NHL-CNS), Sox2 and cytokeratin (CAM5.2, for carcinomas), or Sox2 and HMB45 (for melanomas) showed that in each tumor type, Sox2-immunoreactive cells adjacent to and among the tumor cells were separate from neoplastic cells. Sox2/GFAP double-labeling revealed a consistent pattern of Sox2 immunopositivity both in reactive GFAP-immunopositive astrocytes and in GFAP-negative cells, at the interface of tumor and non-neoplastic brain. These results suggest that neural stem/progenitor cells migrate to non-glial neoplasms in the CNS, are a source of reactive astrocytes, and that Sox2 is a reliable immunohistochemical marker for these cells.
众所周知,正常人类大脑中含有神经干/祖细胞群。最近的研究表明,它们会向多种中枢神经系统组织损伤部位迁移。在一项关于神经干细胞在原发性中枢神经系统淋巴瘤(NHL-CNS)发病机制中潜在作用的研究中,我们观察到神经干/祖细胞似乎聚集在肿瘤与脑的边界处以及肿瘤的前沿,其模式类似于反应性胶质增生所见。我们在通过神经外科手术获取的NHL-CNS转移性癌、转移性黑色素瘤标本中,使用包括CD133、巢蛋白、Ⅱ型β微管蛋白、Musashi1和转录因子Sox2等标准免疫组化标志物来鉴定神经干/祖细胞。我们使用这些标志物中的每一种都得到了相似的结果,但发现Sox2抗体对这些非神经胶质肿瘤边界处的细胞提供了最清晰、最强烈的标记。为了排除免疫反应性细胞实际上是肿瘤性的可能性,对Sox2和CD20(用于NHL-CNS)、Sox2和细胞角蛋白(CAM5.2,用于癌)或Sox2和HMB45(用于黑色素瘤)进行双重免疫组化显示,在每种肿瘤类型中,与肿瘤细胞相邻及肿瘤细胞之间的Sox2免疫反应性细胞与肿瘤细胞是分开的。Sox2/GFAP双重标记显示,在肿瘤与非肿瘤性脑的界面处,反应性GFAP免疫阳性星形胶质细胞和GFAP阴性细胞中均存在一致的Sox2免疫阳性模式。这些结果表明,神经干/祖细胞迁移至中枢神经系统中的非神经胶质肿瘤,是反应性星形胶质细胞的一个来源,并且Sox2是这些细胞可靠的免疫组化标志物。