Aberrant Localization of the Neuronal Class III β-Tubulin in Astrocytomas

Christos D. Katsetos(Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine), Luis Del Valle(Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine), J. F. Geddes(Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine), Martha Assimakopoulou(Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine), Agustín Legido(Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine), James C. Boyd(Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine), Brian J. Balin(Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine), Nehal A. Parikh(Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine), Theodoros Maraziotis(Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine), Jean‐Pierre de Chadarévian(Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine), John Varakis(Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine), Rebecca Matsas(Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine), Anthony Spano(Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine), Anthony Frankfurter(Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine), Mary M. Herman(Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine), Kamel Khalili(Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine)
Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine
May 1, 2001
Cited by 97

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The class III beta-tubulin isotype (betaIII) is widely regarded as a neuronal marker in development and neoplasia. In previous work, we have shown that the expression of betaIII in neuronal/neuroblastic tumors is differentiation dependent. In contrast, the aberrant localization of this isotype in certain nonneuronal neoplasms, such as epithelial neuroendocrine lung tumors, is associated with anaplastic potential. OBJECTIVE: To test the generality of this observation, we investigated the immunoreactivity profile of betaIII in astrocytomas. DESIGN: Sixty archival, surgically excised astrocytomas (8 pilocytic astrocytomas, WHO grade 1; 18 diffuse fibrillary astrocytomas, WHO grade 2; 4 anaplastic astrocytomas, WHO grade 3; and 30 glioblastomas, WHO grade 4), were studied by immunohistochemistry using anti-betaIII monoclonal (TuJ1) and polyclonal antibodies. A monoclonal antibody to Ki-67 nuclear antigen (NC-MM1) was used as a marker for cell proliferation. Antibodies to glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and BM89 synaptic vesicle antigen/synaptophysin were used as glial and neuronal markers, respectively. RESULTS: The betaIII immunoreactivity was significantly greater in high-grade astrocytomas (anaplastic astrocytomas and glioblastomas; median labeling index [MLI], 35%; interquartile range [IQR], 20%-47%) as compared with diffuse fibrillary astrocytomas (MLI, 4%; IQR, 0.2%-21%) (P <.0001) and was rarely detectable in pilocytic astrocytomas (MLI, 0%; IQR, 0%-0.5%) (P <.0001 vs high-grade astrocytomas; P <.01 vs diffuse fibrillary astrocytomas). A highly significant, grade-dependent relationship was observed between betaIII and Ki-67 labeling and malignancy, but this association was stronger for Ki-67 than for betaIII (betaIII, P <.006; Ki-67, P <.0001). There was co-localization of betaIII and GFAP in neoplastic astrocytes, but no BM89 synaptic vesicle antigen/synaptophysin staining was detected. CONCLUSIONS: In the context of astrocytic gliomas, betaIII immunoreactivity is associated with an ascending gradient of malignancy and thus may be a useful ancillary diagnostic marker. However, the significance of betaIII-positive phenotypes in diffuse fibrillary astrocytomas with respect to prognostic and predictive value requires further evaluation. Under certain neoplastic conditions, betaIII expression is not neuron specific, calling for a cautious interpretation of betaIII-positive phenotypes in brain tumors.


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