| Literature DB >> 23249693 |
Dagmar Berghuis1, Marco W Schilham, Susy J Santos, Suvi Savola, Helen J Knowles, Uta Dirksen, Karl-Ludwig Schaefer, Jukka Vakkila, Pancras Cw Hogendoorn, Arjan C Lankester.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chemokine receptor CXCR4, together with its ligand CXCL12, plays critical roles in cancer progression, including growth, metastasis and angiogenesis. Ewing sarcoma is a sarcoma with poor prognosis despite current therapies, particularly for patients with advanced-stage disease. Lungs and bone (marrow), organs of predilection for (primary/metastatic) Ewing sarcoma, represent predominant CXCL12 sources.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23249693 PMCID: PMC3549731 DOI: 10.1186/2045-3329-2-24
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Sarcoma Res ISSN: 2045-3329
Immunohistochemical expression analysis of the CXCR4-CXCL12 axis in Ewing sarcoma
| 1 | lung metastasis (3) | - | - | +/− |
| | bone metastasis (7) | - | - | +/− |
| 2 | lung metastasis (2) | - | + | + |
| 3 | therapy-naive biopsy | +/− | + | + |
| | lung metastasis (5,5) | - | - | +/− |
| 4 | therapy-naive biopsy | ++ | +/− | + |
| | lung metastasis (3) | - | + | ++ |
| | lung metastasis (4) | - | + | ++ |
| 5 | therapy-naive biopsy | ++ | +/− | ++ |
| | bone metastasis (1) | n.e. | +/− | + |
| 6 | therapy-naive biopsy | + | ++ | n.e. |
| | lung metastasis (1) | +/− | +/− | +/− |
| 7 | therapy-naive biopsy | ++ | ++ | + |
| 8 | therapy-naive biopsy | ++ | +/− | + |
| | bone metastasis (2,5) | + | ++ | ++ |
| 9 | therapy-naive biopsy | - | + | + |
| | lung metastasis (0,5) | + | + | ++ |
| 10 | therapy-naive biopsy | + | - | +/− |
| 11 | therapy-naive biopsy | - | + | +/− |
| 12 | therapy-naive biopsy | + | +/− | + |
| 13 | therapy-naive biopsy | ++ | - | +/− |
| 14 | therapy-naive biopsy | - | +/− | + |
| 15 | therapy-naive biopsy | - | - | +/− |
| 16 | therapy-naive biopsy | - | + | +/− |
| 17 | therapy-naive biopsy | - | + | + |
| 18 | therapy-naive biopsy | + | +/− | +/− |
| 19 | therapy-naive biopsy | - | +/− | + |
| 20 | therapy-naive biopsy | +/− | - | + |
| 21 | therapy-naive biopsy | - | - | +/− |
| 22 | therapy-naive biopsy | - | - | - |
| 23 | therapy-naive biopsy | - | +/− | +/− |
| 24 | therapy-naive biopsy | +/− | +/− | +/− |
| 25 | therapy-naive biopsy | ++ | - | - |
| 26 | therapy-naive biopsy | - | + | + |
| 27 | therapy-naive biopsy | + | +/− | + |
| 28 | therapy-naive biopsy | ++ | +/− | + |
| 29 | therapy naive biopsy | - | - | +/− |
| 30 | therapy-naive biopsy | ++ | ++ | + |
| 31 | therapy-naive biopsy | + | - | ++ |
| 32 | therapy-naive biopsy | + | + | + |
| 33 | therapy-naive biopsy | - | - | +/− |
| 34 | therapy-naive biopsy | ++ | + | + |
| 35 | therapy-naive biopsy | + | - | +/− |
| 36 | therapy-naive biopsy | + | + | + |
| 37 | therapy-naive biopsy | + | - | + |
| 38 | therapy-naive biopsy | ++ | n.e. | n.e. |
| 39 | therapy-naive biopsy | ++ | - | +/− |
| 40 | therapy-naive biopsy | - | - | +/− |
| 41 | therapy-naive biopsy | + | + | + |
| 42 | therapy-naive biopsy | + | - | +/− |
| 43 | therapy-naive biopsy | - | ++ | + |
| 44 | therapy-naive biopsy | - | + | + |
| 45 | lung metastasis (1,5) | +/− | +/− | ++ |
| | bone metastasis (2,5) | ++ | +/− | + |
| | lung metastasis (2,5) | - | + | ++ |
| | lung metastasis (4) | - | +/− | ++ |
| | lung metastasis (4) | +/− | +/− | + |
| | lung metastasis (5) | + | + | + |
| 46 | therapy-naive biopsy | + | + | + |
| 47 | therapy-naive biopsy | +/− | ++ | ++ |
aUPN = unique patient number. n.e. = not evaluable; - = absent expression; ‘+/− = weak expression; + = moderate expression; ++ = strong expression. bt-test: therapy-naive Ewing sarcoma demonstrated significantly higher CXCR4 expression levels as compared to metastatic lesions (p = 0.027).
Figure 1Immunohistochemical analysis of expression of the CXCR4-CXCL12 axis in Ewing sarcoma. AF. Light micrographs (20x magnification) of immunohistochemical stainings for CXCR4 and CXCL12 expression in therapy-naive and metastatic EWS. Representative examples. A-C: strong (++), moderate (+) and absent (−) CXCR4 expression, respectively. D-F: strong (++), moderate (+) and weak (+/−) CXCL12 expression, respectively. Whereas CXCR4 was expressed solely by tumor cells, CXCL12 was observed in both tumor and stromal areas. Insets: immunoreactivity for both CXCR4 and CXCL12 was exclusively localized in the cytoplasm of cells. Intensity of staining was (semi-quantitatively) scored according to the quality control system as proposed by Ruiter et al. (see Methods section) [19]. (Decalcified) tonsil tissue sections were used for initial optimization of immunohistochemical staining procedures.
Figure 2Negative impact of CXCR4 expression in therapy-naïve Ewing sarcoma. Kaplan-Meier survival analysis. CXCR4 expression level plotted according to the cut-off values as shown in Table 1: CXCR4 negative (absent (−) expression), CXCR4 positive (weak (+/−), moderate (+) or strong (++) expression). A. Inferior survival of patients with CXCR4 positive therapy-naïve tumors compared to patients with tumors lacking expression of this protein. B. Expression level-dependent impact of CXCR4 expression on patients’ overall survival. Inferior survival of patients with therapy-naïve tumors demonstrating strong CXCR4 expression compared to patients with weak-moderate or absent expression of this protein.
Figure 3Expression and functionality of CXCR4 in Ewing sarcoma: role for CXCL12-dependent modulation of tumor cell proliferation. A. Constitutive surface expression of CXCR4 in EWS cell lines, as assessed by flow cytometry. Results are expressed as the mean ± SD MFI-ratio, obtained in at least two independent experiments. Breast cancer cell line MCF-7 was used as a positive control. B. Flow cytometric analysis of 24-hours hypoxia (0.1% O2)-induced CXCR4 expression in cell lines having either substantial (CADO-ES, EW3, RD-ES) or minimal (STA-ET2.1, TC71) levels of constitutive CXCR4 expression. Results are expressed as the mean ± SD fold increase in MFI-ratio over normoxic control, obtained in at least two independent experiments. Culture under hypoxic conditions (as previously described [18]) did not systematically affect CXCR4 expression. C. Pearson correlation analysis: lack of correlation between in vivo HIF-1α [18] and CXCR4 protein expression levels in 38 therapy-naïve EWS. D. Stimulation of cell lines expressing substantial levels of CXCR4 (CADO-ES, EW3, IOR/BER) with 100ng/ml recombinant CXCL12 for seven days significantly increased cell numbers. Addition of AMD3100 (1μg/ml) abrogated the increase in cell numbers. No effects were observed in cell lines with minimal levels of CXCR4 expression (SK-ES-1, SK-N-MC, STA-ET2.1), nor did AMD3100 treatment alone affect cell proliferation. Cells were cultured in serum-free medium. Cell viability was measured by MTS cell viability assay, a colorimetric method for determining the number of viable cells in proliferation assays (see Methods section). Results are expressed as the mean ± SD fold increase in cell numbers over (untreated) medium control, obtained in at least two independent experiments.