| Literature DB >> 22839358 |
Beatriz de Melo Maia1, André Mourão Lavorato-Rocha, Iara Sant'ana Rodrigues, Glauco Baiocchi, Flávia Munhoz Cestari, Monica Maria Stiepcich, Ludmila Thomé Domingues Chinen, Kátia C Carvalho, Fernando Augusto Soares, Rafael Malagoli Rocha.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Vulvar carcinomas are rare tumors, and there is limited data regarding molecular alterations. To our knowledge there are no published studies on c-KIT and squamous cell carcinomas of the vulva (VSCC). Although there are a significant number of other tumor types which express c-KIT, there remains controversy as to its relationship to patient outcome. Thus, we wished to investigate such controversial findings to determine the prognostic importance of c-KIT by evaluating its protein and mRNA expression in VSCCs, correlating these findings with clinicopathological features and Human Papillomavirus (HPV) infection.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22839358 PMCID: PMC3478999 DOI: 10.1186/1479-5876-10-150
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Figure 1 Main pathways activated by the tyrosine-kinase receptor c-KIT and its effects on carcinogenesis. KIT dimerization occurs from the SCF (yellow) coupling, which leads to phosphorylation of the tyrosine kinase domains (shown with red dots along the intracellular portions of receptors), which triggers the coupling and recruitment of several intracellular proteins that in turn, activate the three routes shown in colors (MAPK, PLCγ and PI3K pathways in purple, red and orange, respectively). This process culminates in cellular activities highlighted in rectangles.
Figure 2 c-KIT immunostaining in vulvar carcinomas: evaluation of immunoreactivity at the membrane and/or cytoplasm (200x magnification). (A) Graphical plot of c-kit immunostaining results by IHC: the number of samples is shown in vertical axis, and the staining in the horizontal axis; (B) and (C): Negative immunostaining for c-KIT; (D) Positive immunostaining for c-KIT in the membrane (arrow); (E) Positive immunostaining for c-KIT in the membrane and cytoplasm (arrows).
Evaluation of histopathological characteristics, clinical data and HPV infection of the patients in relation to c-KIT immunostaining
| | | | | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Negative | 17 (30) | 6 (15) | 24 | 0.034 | |
| | Positive | 40 (70) | 34 (85) | 75 | |
| 9 (47) | 35 (69) | 44 | 0.0053 | ||
| | 10 (53) | 16 (31) | 26 | | |
| 26 (84) | 62 (68) | 88 | 0.0001 | ||
| 5 (16) | 29 (32) | 34 | |||
a. Negative: no immunostaining.
b. Positive: membrane and/or cytoplasm staining.
Figure 3 Kaplan-Meier Global and Recurrence-free survival curves for c-KIT staining. c-KIT positivity correlated with better global survival (p = 0.007) (A) and recurrence-free survival (p < 0.0001) (B) when compared to negative stained tumors (shown in blue lines).
Figure 4 c-KIT mRNA and protein expression in vulvar carcinomas. (A) c-KIT mRNA expression evaluated by qRT-PCR using Relative Quantification (RQ) values (shown vertical axis). Normal samples transcript expression is shown significantly higher than tumor expression (p = 0.0009); c-KIT protein expression assessed by immunohistochemistry showing stronger immunostaining in normal area (B, arrows: normal epithelium, star: stroma) than in tumor area (C, arrow: invasive squamous cell carcinoma with irregular infiltrating borders, star: stroma).