| Literature DB >> 21706474 |
Jasmine Lim1, Anne Goriely, Gareth Dh Turner, Katherine A Ewen, Grete Krag Jacobsen, Niels Graem, Andrew Om Wilkie, Ewa Rajpert-De Meyts.
Abstract
Spermatocytic seminoma (SS) is a rare testicular neoplasm that occurs predominantly in older men. In this study, we aimed to shed light on the histogenesis of SS by investigating the developmental expression of protein markers that identify distinct subpopulations of human spermatogonia in the normal adult testis. We analysed the expression pattern of OCT2, SSX2-4, and SAGE1 in 36 SS cases and four intratubular SS (ISS) as well as a series of normal testis samples throughout development. We describe for the first time two different types of SS characterized by OCT2 or SSX2-4 immunoexpression. These findings are consistent with the mutually exclusive antigenic profile of these markers during different stages of testicular development and in the normal adult testis. OCT2 was expressed predominantly in A(dark) spermatogonia, SSX2-4 was present in A(pale) and B spermatogonia and leptotene spermatocytes, whilst SAGE1 was exclusively present in a subset of post-pubertal germ cells, most likely B spermatogonia. The presence of OCT2 and SSX2-4 in distinct subsets of germ cells implies that these markers represent germ cells at different maturation stages. Analysis of SAGE1 and SSX2-4 in ISS showed spatial differences suggesting ongoing maturation of germ cells during progression of SS tumourigenesis. We conclude that the expression pattern of OCT2, SSX2-4, and SAGE1 supports the origin of SS from spermatogonia and provides new evidence for heterogeneity of this tumour, potentially linked either to the cellular origin of SS or to partial differentiation during tumour progression, including a hitherto unknown OCT2-positive variant of the tumour likely derived from A(dark) spermatogonia.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21706474 PMCID: PMC3210831 DOI: 10.1002/path.2919
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pathol ISSN: 0022-3417 Impact factor: 7.996
Figure 1Distribution of OCT2, SSX2-4, and SAGE1 in the normal adult testis. (A) OCT2: note the strong nuclear staining in a minority of spermatogonia located adjacent to the basement membrane of the tubules (arrowheads). (B) SSX2-4 was detected mainly in Apale/B spermatogonia but was absent in Adark (arrows) spermatogonia. Some of the primary spermatocytes (arrowheads) showed weak staining. (C) SAGE1 was found predominantly in B spermatogonia, characterized by a large circular shape and more internal position in tubule (arrowheads). (D) OCT2 and SSX2-4 double-staining revealed that OCT2 (brown nuclei) and SSX2-4 (red nuclei) were present in two distinct subpopulations of spermatogonia. OCT2 was mainly found in the Adark spermatogonia (arrowheads). Scale bar = 100 µm.
Figure 2Comparative staining of OCT2, SSX2-4, and PLAP in distinct germ cell subpopulations during testis development. (A) The presence of SSX2-4 was first noted at the 16th wg. OCT2 and SSX2-4 are expressed distinctively in two different subsets of germ cells, starting from the 33rd wg to adulthood including at the age of 3 months. Note that horizontally paired images, taken from adjacent sections of the same testis, allow comparison of the staining of individual germ cells for each protein. (B) Left: double labelling of fetal testis at the 33rd wg demonstrates that PLAP is not detected in germ cells expressing OCT2 (brown nuclei). Right: positive control showing strong membranous and cytoplasmic immunoreactivity of PLAP in carcinoma in situ (CIS) cells (red) and OCT2-positive spermatogonia (brown) in the adjacent tubule. Scale bars = 100 µm (all images).
Summary of the immunohistochemical analysis in relation to the mutation status in the series of spermatocytic seminoma (SS)
| Case No | Age (years) | Mutation found | OCT2 | SSX2-4 | SAGE1 | Ki67 (% positive ± SD) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SS4 | 75 | − | Neg | + (w) | Neg | 7.0, 11.5 |
| SS5 | 76 | − | Neg | + (w) | Neg | 42.2 |
| SS7 | 50 | − | Neg | + + (str) | Neg | n/a |
| SS8 | 86 | − | Neg | + + + (str) | + (w) | 0, 9.1 |
| SS9 | 87 | Neg | + (w) | Neg | 5.4, 0.9 | |
| SS10 | 61 | − | Neg | + + (str) | Neg | 6.4, 6.8 |
| SS11 | 64 | − | + (w) | Neg | Neg | 24.2 |
| SS13 | 34 | − | + (w) | + + (str) | + + + (str) | 4.3, 5.4 |
| SS14 | 71 | n/r | Neg | + (str) | + (w) | 0, 0.9 |
| SS15 | 53 | − | + (w) | + + + (str) | + + (str) | 8.1, 6.1 |
| SS16 | 40 | − | Neg | + + + (str) | Neg | 30.8, 26.1 |
| SS17 | 61 | n/r | Neg | Neg | Neg | 18.5, 19.8 |
| SS19 | 44 | − | Neg | + + (str) | + (w) | 3.3, 17.2 |
| SS20 | 37 | − | Neg | + + (str) | Neg | 15.8, 19.6 |
| SS21 | 67 | Neg | + + + (str) | + (w) | 28.6, 13.7 | |
| SS22 | 41 | − | Neg | + (w) | Neg | 46.0, 59.5 |
| SS23 | 69 | Neg | + + (str) | Neg | 44.3, 43.2 | |
| SS24 | 79 | n/r | Neg | + (w) | + + (w) | 13.5, 7.6 |
| SS25 | 89 | n/r | Neg | + + (str) | Neg | 0, 0 |
| SS26 | n/a | − | Neg | + + + (str) | + + (str) | 31.5, 24.4 |
| SS27 | 55 | − | Neg | + + + (str) | + + + (str) | 22.8, 17.2 |
| SS28 | 63 | n/r | Neg | + (str) | + + + (str) | n/a |
| SS29 | 75 | n/r | Neg | + (str) | Neg | 2.2, 0 |
| SS30 | 79 | Neg | + + + (str) | Neg | 0, 1.1 | |
| SS31 | 75 | Neg | + + + (str) | Neg | 32.1, 44.2 | |
| SS32 | 44 | n/r | + (w) | + + (str) | + + + (str) | 9.2 ± 3.5 |
| SS33 | 52 | − | Neg | + (w) | Neg | 2.7, 6.0 |
| SS35 | 80 | Neg | + + + (str) | Neg | 22.0, 19.0 | |
| SS37 | 47 | − | Neg | + + + (str) | + + (str) | 46.4, 39.1 |
| SS38 | 74 | − | + + (str) | Neg | Neg | 51.3, 62.0 |
| SS39 | 43 | n/r | Neg | + + + (str) | + + (w) | 24.8, 23.5 |
| SS40 | 67 | Neg | + + (str) | Neg | 6.2, 2.9 | |
| SS41 | 61 | n/r | Neg | Neg | Neg | 3.8, 2.9 |
| SS42 | 73 | n/r | Neg | + + (w) | Neg | 15.5, 9.6 |
| SS43 | 87 | n/a | Neg | + + (str) | + (w) | n/a |
| SS44 | 75 | n/a | Neg | + (w) | Neg | n/a |
Most of the tumours were investigated for candidate gene mutations in the previous study [8], so the original numbering is retained.
Only a very small number of cells were available in the tissue core.
Ki67 antigen negative but some mitotic figures visible in the core.
−, no mutation found; n/r, no results owing to the low quality of tumour DNA; n/a, not available. Staining score describes the proportion of positive cells as + + +, nearly all cells stained; + +, approximately half of the cells stained; +, a low percentage of cells stained; Neg, no positive cell detected; or
only single cells stained. Staining intensity is categorized as str, strong; or w, weak. Ki67 results are presented as a percentage (%) of stained cells, when one to two separate counts were taken, or as % of stained cells ± unbiased estimate of SD, when four separate counts were taken (staining intensity was strong in all specimens).
Figure 3Expression of OCT2, SSX2-4, and SAGE1 in spermatocytic seminoma (SS). (A) Examples of immunohistochemical detection of OCT2 (left), SSX2-4 (middle), and SAGE1 (right) in SS. A heterogeneous nuclear staining pattern with different intensities is seen in the tumour cells. Scale bar = 100 µm. (B) Venn diagram showing the relationship between OCT2, SSX2-4, and SAGE1 expression in SS.
Intratubular spermatocytic seminoma (ISS) samples included in the study. Staining score and the Ki67-based proliferation score are the same as in Table 1
| Case No | Age (years) | Mutation found | Cell type | OCT2 | SSX | SAGE1 | Ki67 (% positive ± SD) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ISS1 | 75 | Overt SS (SS31) | − | + + + | − | 32.1, 44.2 | |
| ISS | − | + + + | + + | 36.6, 25.8 | |||
| SPG (adjacent tubule) | + | + + + | + | n/d | |||
| ISS2 | 68 | − | Overt SS | − | + + + | + + + | 39.6 ± 7.4 |
| ISS | − | + + + | + + + | 19.1 ± 2.9 | |||
| SPG (adjacent tubule) | + | + | + | n/d | |||
| ISS3 | 31 | − | Overt SS | − | + + + | + + + | 22.9 ± 4.4 |
| ISS | − | + + + | + + + (focal) | 15.3, 18.5 | |||
| SPG (adjacent tubule) | + | + | + | n/d | |||
| ISS4 | 36 | − | Overt SS | − | + + + (focal) | − | 13.1 ± 7.1 |
| ISS | − | + + | + + + (focal) | 15.3, 5.0 | |||
| SPG (adjacent tubule) | + | + | + | n/d |
SPG = spermatogonia. n/d = not done
Figure 4The distribution of spermatogonial markers during progression in two cases of intratubular spermatocytic seminoma (ISS). (A) ISS4. Sections labelled 1 and 2 provide a low-power (scale bar = 2.5 mm) overview of adjacent sections stained with SSX2-4 and SAGE1, respectively. A subpopulation of ISS tumour cells co-expressing both SSX2-4 and SAGE1 (1A, 2A) is mainly found in a region located away from the bulk of the tumour (starting from the edge of the sections). However, SAGE1 is absent and only SSX2-4 is observed in the ISS cells in close vicinity of the tumour (1B, 2B). In the overt SS region, focal SSX2-4 expression is found (1C) and no SAGE1-immunopositive cells are detected (2C). Scale bar = 100 µm. (B) ISS2 showing the presence of normal tubules (NT), ISS, and SS within a single section. Note the positive staining for SSX2-4, but negative staining for OCT2, within both SS and ISS. However, occasional cells (Adark spermatogonia shown in the inset) are OCT2-positive in adjacent normal tubules (arrowheads). Scale bar = 100 µm.