| Literature DB >> 23401795 |
Michael J Monument1, Stephen L Lessnick, Joshua D Schiffman, Rl Tx Randall.
Abstract
Microsatellite instability (MSI) is a unique molecular abnormality, indicative of a deficient DNA mismatch repair (MMR) system. Described and characterized in the colorectal cancer literature, the MSI-positive phenotype is predictive of disease susceptibility, pathogenesis, and prognosis. The clinical relevance of MSI in colorectal cancer has inspired similar inquisition within the sarcoma literature, although unfortunately, with very heterogeneous results. Evolving detection techniques, ill-defined sarcoma-specific microsatellite loci and small study numbers have hampered succinct conclusions. The literature does suggest that MSI in sarcoma is observed at a frequency similar to that of sporadic colorectal cancers, although there is little evidence to suggest that MSI-positive tumors share distinct biological attributes. Emerging evidence in Ewing sarcoma has demonstrated an intriguing mechanistic role of microsatellite DNA in the activation of key EWS/FLI-target genes. These findings provide an alternative perspective to the biological implications of microsatellite instability in sarcoma and warrant further investigation using sophisticated detection techniques, sensitive microsatellite loci, and appropriately powered study designs.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23401795 PMCID: PMC3564276 DOI: 10.5402/2012/473146
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ISRN Oncol ISSN: 2090-5661
Chronological summary of MSI assessment in sarcomas.
| Authors | Year | Sarcoma population | Tissue source | Method of microsatellite assessment | Bethesda consensus panel | Frequency of MSI | Clinical correlation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wooster et al. [ | 1994 | Soft-tissue sarcomas | Unspecified tumor preparation; peripheral blood (genomic control DNA) | PCR; 6% agarose electrophoresis, subcloning, and sequence analysis | 0/5 markers assessed | 11% (2/18) MSI at one loci | Not assessed |
| Belchis et al. [ | 1996 | Osteosarcoma | FFPE tumor specimens; unspecified normal tissue | PCR; gel electrophoresis; autoradiography | 0/5 markers assessed | 44% (8/18) with MSI at ≥1 loci (2/8 were MSI-H) | Not assessed |
| Tarkkanen et al. [ | 1996 | Bone sarcomas | Unspecified tumor preparation; peripheral blood (genomic control DNA) | PCR; gel electrophoresis; autoradiography | 0/5 markers assessed | No MSI observed | n/a |
| Martin et al. [ | 1998 | Bone and soft tissue | Fresh frozen tumor and peripheral blood (genomic control DNA) | PCR; gel electrophoresis; autoradiography | 0/5 markers assessed | 44% (7/16) with MSI at ≥1 loci (3/7 MSI-H) | MSI associated with poor clinical outcome |
| Aue et al. [ | 1998 | Clear cell sarcoma and melanoma | FFPE specimens (tumor and genomic control DNA) | PCR; gel electrophoresis; autoradiography | 0/5 markers assessed | No MSI observed | Conclude MSI analysis can be used to differentiate CCS from melanoma |
| Klinger et al. [ | 2000 | Chondrosarcoma | FFPE specimens (tumor and genomic control DNA) | PCR; gel electrophoresis; autoradiography | 0/5 markers assessed | 50% (6/12) with MSI at ≥1 loci (3/6 MSI-H) | Not assessed |
| Entz-Werle et al. [ | 2003 | Osteosarcoma | Fresh frozen tumor and peripheral blood (genomic control DNA) | Fluorescence-based PCR; automated sequencing | 1/5 markers assessed | No MSI instability observed | n/a |
| Ohali et al. [ | 2004 | Ewing sarcoma | Fresh frozen tumor and peripheral blood (genomic control DNA) | PCR; gel electrophoresis; autoradiography | 2/5 markers assessed | 48% (11/23) with MSI at ≥1 loci (4/11 MSI-H) | MSI associated with poor clinical outcome |
| Rucińska et al. [ | 2005 | Soft-tissue sarcomas | Fresh frozen tumor and peripheral blood (genomic control DNA) | Fluorescence-based PCR; automated sequencing | 1/5 markers assessed | 100% (8/8) of high-grade sarcomas with MSI at ≥1 loci (4/8 MSI-H); No MSI in low-grade sarcomas | Not assessed |
| Ebinger et al. [ | 2005 | Ewing sarcoma | FFPE specimens (tumor and genomic control DNA) | Unspecified | 5/5 markers assessed | 6% (1/18) with MSI at one loci | Not assessed |
| Kawaguchi et al. [ | 2005 | STS | Fresh frozen tumor and normal tissue | Fluorescence-based PCR; automated sequencing | 1/5 markers assessed | 25% (10/40) with MSI at ≥1 loci (2/10 MSI-H) | Not assessed |
| Entz-Werlé et al. [ | 2005 | Osteosarcoma | Fresh frozen tumor and peripheral blood (genomic control DNA) | Fluorescence-based PCR; automated sequencing | 1/5 markers assessed | No MSI instability observed | n/a |
| Garcia et al. [ | 2006 | Clear-cell sarcoma | FFPE specimens (tumor and genomic control DNA) | Fluorescence-based PCR; automated sequencing | 5/5 markers assessed | 11% (1/9) with MSI at one loci | Conclude MSI analysis can be used to differentiate CCS from melanoma |
| Alldinger et al. [ | 2007 | Ewing sarcoma | FFPE tumor specimens and peripheral blood (genomic control DNA) | Fluorescence-based PCR; automated sequencing | 5/5 markers assessed | 14% (8/55) with MSI at one loci | MSI not predictive of clinical outcome |
MSI: microsatellite instability; STS: soft-tissue sarcoma; FFPE: formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded; PCR: polymerase chain reaction; CCS: clear-cell sarcoma.
Figure 1(a) Microsatellite instability was originally assessed using gel electrophoresis and autoradiographic detection. In the left panel, additional bands (black arrows) in the tumor lane illustrate multiple contracted microsatellite alleles relative to the genomic control lane. In the right panel, an information (heterozygous) microsatellite is shown in the genomic control sample, and a significant loss of signal intensity for the smaller allele is observed in the tumor sample, characteristic of allelic imbalance/loss of heterozygosity (LOH). (b) Microsatellite loci are now commonly assessed using fluorescent PCR amplifications, capillary electrophoresis, and automated sequencing techniques. Laser scanners detect fluorescent PCR products and generate a chromatogram displaying microsatellite allele frequencies. Note in the tumor panel, one of the alleles has undergone contraction, depicting MSI in this tumor specimen. (c) Subcloning and direct sequencing of microsatellite amplifications can yield high resolution of the microsatellite sequence and can detect subtle changes in microsatellite constitution. This method of analysis is more time consuming, although programmed bioinformatics software can greatly assist the interpretation of high-volume data. Panel (b) modified with permission from Vilar and Gruber [57].