| Literature DB >> 27871249 |
Yoko Gunji-Niitsu1,2, Toshio Kumasaka3,2, Shigehiro Kitamura4, Yoshito Hoshika1,2, Takuo Hayashi5,2, Hitoshi Tokuda6, Riichiro Morita7, Etsuko Kobayashi1,2, Keiko Mitani5,2, Mika Kikkawa8, Kazuhisa Takahashi1, Kuniaki Seyama9,10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Birt-Hogg-Dubé (BHD) syndrome is a rare inherited autosomal genodermatosis and caused by germline mutation of the folliculin (FLCN) gene, a tumor suppressor gene of which protein product is involved in mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR) signaling pathway regulating cell growth and metabolism. Clinical manifestations in BHD syndrome is characterized by fibrofolliculomas of the skin, pulmonary cysts with or without spontaneous pneumothorax, and renal neoplasms. There has been no pulmonary neoplasm reported in BHD syndrome, although the condition is due to deleterious sequence variants in a tumor suppressor gene. Here we report, for the first time to our knowledge, a patient with BHD syndrome who was complicated with a clear cell "sugar" tumor (CCST) of the lung, a benign tumor belonging to perivascular epithelioid cell tumors (PEComas) with frequent causative relation to tuberous sclerosis complex 1 (TSC1) or 2 (TSC2) gene. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Folliculin; Germline mutation; Loss of heterozygosity; Tumor suppressor gene syndrome
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27871249 PMCID: PMC5117512 DOI: 10.1186/s12881-016-0350-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Genet ISSN: 1471-2350 Impact factor: 2.103
Fig. 1Plain radiograph and computed tomography of the chest. Plain chest radiograph on admission showed a nodular shadow superimposed on the edge of a cardiac silhouette (a). Computed tomography of the chest demonstrated a round nodule (the larger nodule, 25 mm in diameter) with a clear margin in the lower, left lobe and multiple irregularly shaped cysts in the bilateral lower lobes (b). Another axial image showed a smaller nodule (5 mm in diameter) having a similar characteristics with the larger nodule (c). Note that a small cyst abutting a pulmonary artery (white arrowheads)
Fig. 2The family pedigree. The family pedigree includes a symbolic presentation of the three clinical features of Birt-Hogg-Dubé (BHD) syndrome: pneumothorax, fibrofolliculoma-like papules (not proven by biopsy), and renal cancer. The Roman numerals at the left side represent generations. FLCN genetic testing was performed in the index case (IV-1, arrow) and her mother (III-2), and both were demonstrated to carry the germline FLCN mutation [indicated by E+(FLCN)]. A marked prevalence of cancer-related death was found among maternal first- and second-generation descendants. The index case and mother also had a past medical history of malignancy (as described in the text)
Fig. 3Pathologic findings of a pulmonary nodule in the left lower lobe. The nodule consisted of polygonal tumor cells with pleomorphic nuclei and clear cytoplasm (a, H&E). The PAS stain was intensively positive in cytoplasm of tumor cells (b). Immunohistochemistry revealed that nuclei of the tumor cells were diffusely positive for microphthalmia transcription factor (c), and their membrane was weakly positive for CD1a (d), strongly positive for CD10 (e), and focally positive for folliculin (f)
Summary of immunoreactivity demonstrated in Birt-Hogg-Dubé syndrome-associated clear cell “sugar” tumor in the lung
| Antibodies | Immunoreactivity |
|---|---|
| Cytokeratin | - |
| Vimentin | + (Focally strong) |
| α-smooth muscle actin | - |
| HMB45 | - |
| Melan-A | - |
| PNL-2 | - |
| Microphthalmia transcription factor | + |
| S100 | + (Focally strong) |
| CD1a | + (Focally weak) |
| CD10 | + (Focally strong) |
| CD63 | + (Diffusely weak) |
| folliclin | + (Focally strong) |
Fig. 4Mutation analysis of the FLCN gene. Sequencing of exon 12 of the FLCN gene demonstrated a superimposed sequence after the CCACCCT repeat when genomic DNA isolated from the index case’s peripheral blood leukocytes was used as a template (a). Cloning of the PCR product of exon 12 identified clones carrying the wild-type sequence and those carrying an insertion of 7 nucleotides (CCACCCT) (c.1347_1353dupCCACCCT), resulting in a frame shift and premature termination of protein translation (b). In contrast, only the mutated sequence with a 7-nucleotide insertion was demonstrated when genomic DNA isolated from microdissected tumor cells was utilized as a template (c)
Fig. 5Results of loss-of-heterozygosity (LOH) analysis. Representative results of LOH analysis at D17S2196 and D17S740. Genomic DNA was isolated from both normal lung tissue and tumor cells microdissected from lung pathological specimen. One of the alleles at both polymorphic markers nearly disappeared in tumor cells (arrows). The upper bar with numerals shows an electrophoretic position of DNA fragment size (bases)