Karkavelas G, Katsetos C D, Geddes J F, Herman M M, Vinores S A, Cooper H S, Provencio J, Frankfurter A
Neuropathology Laboratory, Hahnemann University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Anat Rec. 1998 Mar;250(3):344-50. doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1097-0185(199803)250:3<344::AID-AR9>3.0.CO;2-#.
The Class III beta-tubulin isotype (beta III) is expressed specifically in central and peripheral nervous system neurons at various stages of neuronal differentiation. We have shown previously that beta III is expressed in a differentiation-dependent manner in human neuroblastomas arising in the adrenal medulla and sympathetic chains (Katsetos et al., Clin Neuropathol 13:241-255, 1994). The neuronal distribution of beta III in the developing and mature human adrenal medullae is detailed in the companion article (Katsetos et al., 1998A).
We have compared the localization of the neuronal beta III to S-100 protein, a sustentacular cell marker, in 14 formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded primary human pheochromocytomas of the adrenal medulla and 14 adrenocortical tumors (adenomas and carcinomas).
In pheochromocytomas, beta III staining was present in all tumors, but the number of stained cells varied in the two neural neoplastic phenotypes. Although the majority of chromaffin-like cells were beta III-positive, there was a lack of beta III in one-third of the tumor cells. Compared to chromaffin-like phenotypes, neuronal (ganglion-like cells) were invariably beta III-positive. Stromal sustentacular cells, stromal fibroblasts, and tumor blood vessels were beta III-negative. Sustentacular cells in pheochromocytomas were S-100 protein-positive, but beta III-negative. Primary adrenocortical tumors were beta III-negative with the exception of rare beta III-positive cells demonstrated in one case.
The distribution of beta III in human pheochromocytomas of the adrenal gland is differentiation-dependent, closely recapitulating chromaffin cell and neuronal phenotypes of the normal adrenal medulla. Our findings indicate that beta III may be used as one of the adjuvant neural markers in the differential diagnosis of adrenal tumors, i.e., pheochromocytoma versus adrenocortical carcinoma. The occurrence of rare beta III-positive cells in cortical carcinomas is exceptional and probably represents the acquisition of a divergent neuroendocrine phenotype. The significance of the latter is unclear, although it may constitute a marker for malignancy.
Ⅲ类β微管蛋白异构体(βⅢ)在神经元分化的各个阶段在中枢和外周神经系统神经元中特异性表达。我们之前已经表明,βⅢ在肾上腺髓质和交感神经链中发生的人类神经母细胞瘤中以分化依赖的方式表达(Katsetos等人,《临床神经病理学》13:241 - 255,1994)。在配套文章中详细描述了βⅢ在发育中和成熟的人类肾上腺髓质中的神经元分布(Katsetos等人,1998A)。
我们比较了神经元βⅢ与S - 100蛋白(一种支持细胞标志物)在14例福尔马林固定、石蜡包埋的原发性肾上腺髓质嗜铬细胞瘤和14例肾上腺皮质肿瘤(腺瘤和癌)中的定位。
在嗜铬细胞瘤中,所有肿瘤均有βⅢ染色,但在两种神经肿瘤表型中染色细胞数量有所不同。虽然大多数嗜铬样细胞βⅢ呈阳性,但三分之一的肿瘤细胞缺乏βⅢ。与嗜铬样表型相比,神经元样(神经节样细胞)始终βⅢ呈阳性。间质支持细胞、间质成纤维细胞和肿瘤血管βⅢ呈阴性。嗜铬细胞瘤中的支持细胞S - 100蛋白呈阳性,但βⅢ呈阴性。原发性肾上腺皮质肿瘤βⅢ呈阴性,仅在1例中发现罕见的βⅢ阳性细胞。
βⅢ在肾上腺人类嗜铬细胞瘤中的分布是分化依赖的,紧密重现了正常肾上腺髓质的嗜铬细胞和神经元表型。我们的研究结果表明,βⅢ可作为肾上腺肿瘤鉴别诊断中的辅助神经标志物之一,即嗜铬细胞瘤与肾上腺皮质癌的鉴别。皮质癌中罕见的βⅢ阳性细胞的出现是例外情况,可能代表获得了一种不同的神经内分泌表型。后者的意义尚不清楚,尽管它可能构成恶性肿瘤的标志物。