| Literature DB >> 27229317 |
Maria-Magdalena Georgescu1,2, Bret C Mobley3, Brent A Orr4, Ping Shang5, Norman L Lehman6, Xiaoping Zhu7, Thomas J O'Neill8, Veena Rajaram5, Kimmo J Hatanpaa5, Charles F Timmons5, Jack M Raisanen9.
Abstract
The adaptor protein NHERF1 (Na/H exchanger-3 regulatory factor-1) and its associated ezrin-radixin-moesin-merlin/neurofibromin-2 (ERM-NF2) family proteins are required for epithelial morphogenesis and have been implicated in cancer progression. NHERF1 is expressed in ependymal cells and constitutes a highly sensitive diagnostic marker for ependymoma, where it labels membrane polarity structures. Since NHERF1 and ERM-NF2 proteins show polarized expression in choroid plexus (CP) cells, we tested their diagnostic utility in CP neoplasms. NHERF1 immunohistochemistry in 43 adult and pediatric tumors with papillary morphology revealed strong apical plasma membrane staining in CP papilloma (WHO grade I) and cytoplasmic expression in CP carcinoma (WHO grade III). Ezrin and moesin showed similar but less distinctive staining. NHERF1 also labeled papillary tumors of the pineal region in a microlumen and focal apical membrane pattern, suggestive of a transitional morphology between CP papilloma and ependymoma. CP tumors of all grades could be differentiated from metastatic carcinomas with papillary architecture by NF2, which showed polarized membranous staining in CP tumors. NHERF1 and NF2 immunohistochemistry showed enhanced sensitivity and specificity for CP tumors compared to commonly used markers, including cytokeratins and Kir7.1, emerging as reliable diagnostic tools for the differential diagnosis of papillary tumors of the central nervous system.Entities:
Keywords: CNS metastases; Choroid plexus tumors; Moesin; NF2; NHERF1/EBP50; Papillary tumor of the pineal region
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27229317 PMCID: PMC4882843 DOI: 10.1186/s40478-016-0329-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol Commun ISSN: 2051-5960 Impact factor: 7.801
Fig. 1ERM protein detection in CP. WB analysis of human normal CP tissue lysate (30 μg proteins) with individual ERM and NHERF1 antibodies. Cell lysates from human LN229 glioblastoma cells infected with retroviruses carrying vector control and ERM specific shRNAs (Moe – moesin, Ez – ezrin, Rad – radixin) were run in parallel to test the specificity of the antibodies. Actin is used as loading control. Note specific detection of each ERM protein and lack of cross-reactivity between antibodies
Fig. 2NHERF1 and ERM-NF2 expression in normal and transformed CP provides new diagnostic markers for CP tumors. a IHC with NHERF1 and NF2 antibodies in normal CP shows apical plasma membrane and cytoplasmic distribution of NHERF1 and characteristic basolateral plasma membrane expression of NF2. The inset shows additional faint apical plasma membrane expression of NF2. The H& E panels in A–C are shown for comparison. b IHC with indicated antibodies of CP papilloma shows prominent apical plasma membrane expression of NHERF1 that is more pronounced than the Kir7.1 labeling, basolateral plasma membrane expression of NF2, strong ezrin expression in the cytoplasm and at the apical plasma membrane and moesin labeling of the apical plasma membrane but also of the vasculature. c IHC with NHERF1 and NF2 antibodies in CP carcinoma (Case CPC3, Additional File 1: Table S1) shows delocalization to the cytoplasm of NHERF1 and focally preserved basolateral expression of NF2 (inset). d Quantification of the NHERF1 subcellular distribution in normal CP, CP papilloma (CPP) and carcinoma (CPC) cases. PM, plasma membrane. *From 22 cases of CPP, one had predominant oncocytic-like morphology and was not included in this analysis
NHERF1 and NF2 in the differential diagnosis of papillary tumors of the CNS
| Diagnosis | Patients | IHC | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. cases Gender | Median age (range, yrs) | Location | NHERF1 | NF2 | |||
| 4thV | 3rdV | LV | |||||
| CPP Adult | 13 (6 F, 5 M) | 43 (20–73) | 121 | 1 | 0 | Apical PM | Basolateral and apical PM |
| CPP Pediatric | 9 (4 M, 5 F) | 0.5 (0.25-6) | 1 | 2 | 6 | Apical PM | Basolateral and apical PM |
| aCPP Adult | 2 (1 M, 1 F) | 40 (35, 46) | 2 | 0 | 0 | Cyt, variable2; | Basolateral and apical PM |
| aCPP Pediatric | 4 (2 M; 2 F) | 0.7 (0.3-1.6) | 0 | 0 | 4 | Cyt, apical PM | Basolateral and apical PM |
| CPC Adult | 1 (1 F) | 37 | 1 | 0 | 0 | Cyt or absent | Basolateral and apical PM |
| CPC Pediatric | 3 (2 M, 1 F) | 1.7 (1, 2) | 0 | 0 | 3 | Cyt or absent | Basolateral and apical PM |
| PTPR | 5 (3 M, 2 F) | 40 (33–62) | 0 | 5 | 0 | Microlumens, apical PM | Cytoplasmic, membranous |
| Metastases3 | 6 (4 F, 2 M) | 65 (43–73) | Apical PM | Absent, apical PM, nuclear | |||
CPP, CP papilloma; aCPP, atypical CPP; CPC, CP carcinoma; M, male; F, female; 4thV, 4th ventricle; 3rdV, 3rd ventricle; LV, lateral ventricle; PM, plasma membrane; Cyt, cytoplasmic
1These 12 tumors were located in the posterior fossa, either in the 4th ventricle (6) or in the cerebello-pontine angle (6)
2In one atypical CPP case, NHERF1 apical PM staining as in CPP was seen in papillary regions, and rings and microlumens as in ependymoma were seen in confluent areas
3These metastases were selected based on papillary morphology. They include papillary thyroid carcinoma (3; frontal lobe, cerebellum, spinal cord), lung adenocarcinoma (2; parietal lobe) and serous ovarian carcinoma (1; temporal lobe)
Fig. 3Clinico-pathologic correlates in two adult patients with atypical CP papilloma (aCPP). a Distinct patterns of NHERF1 IHC in two aCPP adult cases, labeling the cytoplasm, in aCPP1, and rings and microlumens in compact areas, in aCPP2. NF2 IHC has membrane staining in both cases, which helps cueing the CP origin of the tumors. The arrow indicates a mitotic figure in aCPP2. b Time course of clinical events shows disease onset, surgical interventions and pathologic diagnosis in red, and radiologic progression or death in black. The survival is shown in blue. aCPP1 is alive at the time of this analysis, with wide CNS dissemination, including the lumbar spinal cord. Note sequential progression from CP papilloma (CPP) to aCPP in aCPP2
Fig. 4Mixed apical plasma membrane and microlumen NHERF1 labeling pattern in PTPR. a H& E of PTPR1 case shows typical multilayered papillary histology. IHC with NHERF1 antibody shows a characteristic mixed labeling pattern with focal apical plasma membrane staining (arrows) and microlumens (right panel). b H& E in PTPR4 shows densely cellular multi-layered papillae with areas of necrosis (arrow). Compact areas have many mitoses, including atypical ones (arrowhead in inset), and ependymal morphology, including true rosettes, also highlighted by NHERF1 IHC (red arrows)
Fig. 5NHERF1 and NF2 expression in papillary metastatic carcinoma to the CNS. Representative cases of papillary thyroid carcinoma (67 year-old male), lung adenocarcinoma (71 year-old female), and serous ovarian carcinoma (43 year-old female) with papillary morphology assessed for IHC with NHERF1 and NF2 antibodies show apical plasma membrane localization of NHERF1 and a range of expression profiles for NF2. Note lack of NF2 basolateral plasma membrane staining in metastatic carcinomas, distinguishing these from CP tumors