| Literature DB >> 30990879 |
Sulgi Lee1,2, Madhuri Kambhampati1, Sridevi Yadavilli1, Heather Gordish-Dressman1, Mariarita Santi3, Conrad R Cruz4, Roger J Packer5, M Isabel Almira-Suarez6, Eugene I Hwang5, Javad Nazarian1,2,5,7.
Abstract
Diffuse intrinsic pontine gliomas (DIPGs) are deadly tumors comprising 10%-15% of all childhood CNS cancers. Standard treatment is considered palliative and prognosis is near universal mortality. DIPGs have been classified into genomic subtypes based on histone variants with the lysine to methionine mutation on position 27 of histone tails (K27M). Given the increasing promise of immunotherapy, there have been ongoing efforts to identify tumor-specific antigens to serve as immunologic targets. We evaluated a large cohort of CNS specimens for Wilms' tumor protein (WT1) expression. These specimens include primary pediatric CNS tumors (n = 38 midline gliomas and n = 3 non-midline gliomas; n = 23 DIPG, n = 10 low-grade gliomas, n = 8 high-grade gliomas), and DIPG primary cells. Here, we report the validation of WT1 as a tumor-associated antigen in DIPGs. We further report that WT1 expression is significantly correlated with specific oncohistone variants, with the highest expression detected in the H3.3K27M subgroup. WT1 expression was absent in all control specimens (n = 21). Western blot assays using DIPG primary cells (n = 6) showed a trend of higher WT1 expression in H3.3K27M cells when compared with H3.1 K27M cells and H3 wildtype cells. Our data are the first indication of the association between WT1 and DIPG, with specific upregulation in those harboring oncohistone H3.3K27M.Entities:
Keywords: Brainstem glioma; Childhood midline glioma; Diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG); Wilms tumor protein (WT1)
Year: 2019 PMID: 30990879 PMCID: PMC6467196 DOI: 10.1093/jnen/nlz021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuropathol Exp Neurol ISSN: 0022-3069 Impact factor: 3.685
Summary of Pediatric CNS Tumor Patient Samples Used in This Study
| PID | Oncohistone | Tumor Location | Sample Types | Histological Diagnosis | WHO Grade | WT1 Score | Gender | Age at Diagnosis (Yrs) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 13 | H3.3 | Pons | FFPE, Frozen | DIPG | IV | 4 | M | 19.7 |
| 56 | H3.3 | Pons | FFPE, Frozen | DIPG | IV | 4 | M | 7.5 |
| 80 | N/A | Thalamus, posterior fossa, pons | FFPE | Glioblastoma | IV | 4 | M | 9.4 |
| 82 | N/A | Thalamus, midbrain, third ventricle | FFPE | Glioblastoma | IV | 4 | F | 15.9 |
| 88 | N/A | Cerebellum | FFPE | Glioblastoma | IV | 4 | M | 12.9 |
| 76 | N/A | Pons | FFPE | DIPG | III | 4 | M | 1.2 |
| 93 | N/A | Temporal | FFPE | Low-grade astrocytoma | II | 4 | M | 14.3 |
| 92 | N/A | Cerebellum | FFPE | Pilocytic astrocytoma | I | 4 | M | 16.8 |
| 45 | N/A | Pons | FFPE | DIPG | IV | 3 | F | 9 |
| 16 | N/A | Pons | FFPE | DIPG | IV | 3 | M | 19 |
| 28 | H3.3 | Pons | FFPE, Frozen | DIPG | IV | 3 | M | 4 |
| 60 | H3.3 | Pons | FFPE, Frozen | DIPG | IV | 3 | M | 6 |
| 77 | H3.3 | Right lateral ventricle, corpus callosum | FFPE | Glioblastoma | IV | 3 | F | 18 |
| 94 | N/A | Frontal | FFPE | Glioblastoma | IV | 3 | M | 24 |
| 81 | N/A | Thalamus, third ventricle | FFPE | Anaplastic astrocytoma | III | 3 | F | 10.4 |
| 46 | N/A | Pons | FFPE | DIPG | III | 3 | F | 1 |
| 47 | N/A | Pons | FFPE | DIPG | II | 3 | M | 20 |
| 89 | N/A | Brainstem | FFPE | Low-grade astrocytoma | II | 3 | M | 14 |
| 26 | H3.3 | Pons | FFPE, Frozen | DIPG | IV | 2 | F | 9.8 |
| 29 | H3.3 | Pons | FFPE, Frozen | DIPG | IV | 2 | M | 8.9 |
| 63 | H3.1 | Pons | FFPE, Frozen | DIPG | IV | 2 | F | 3.3 |
| 40 | N/A | Pons | FFPE | DIPG | IV | 2 | F | 7 |
| 7 | H3.3 | Pons | FFPE | DIPG | IV | 2 | F | 5 |
| 57 | H3.3 | Pons | FFPE, Frozen | DIPG | IV | 2 | M | 6 |
| 84 | N/A | Brainstem | FFPE | Anaplastic astrocytoma | III | 2 | F | 8.9 |
| 48 | N/A | Pons | FFPE | DIPG | III | 2 | M | 17 |
| 25 | H3.3 | Pons | FFPE | DIPG | IV | 2 | F | 9 |
| 79 | N/A | Thalamus | FFPE | Low-grade astrocytoma | II | 2 | M | 15.8 |
| 83 | N/A | Thalamus | FFPE | Pilocytic astrocytoma | I | 2 | M | 7 |
| 86 | N/A | Hypothalamus | FFPE | Pilocytic astrocytoma | I | 2 | F | 3.2 |
| 90 | N/A | Hypothalamus | FFPE | Pilocytic astrocytoma | I | 2 | F | 4.8 |
| 27 | H3.1 | Pons | FFPE | DIPG | IV | 1 | M | 5.5 |
| 51 | H3.3 | Pons | FFPE | DIPG | IV | 1 | F | 7 |
| 62 | H3.1 | Pons | FFPE | DIPG | IV | 1 | F | 5.3 |
| 85 | N/A | Intramedullary c-spine | FFPE | Anaplastic astrocytoma | III | 1 | M | 5.8 |
| 14 | H3.1 | Pons | FFPE | DIPG | IV | 1 | M | 6 |
| 87 | N/A | Brainstem | FFPE | Low-grade astrocytoma | II | 1 | F | 13.8 |
| 59 | Wild-type | Pons | FFPE | DIPG | II | 2 | M | 9.3 |
| 91 | N/A | Posterior fossa | FFPE | Pilocytic astrocytoma | I | 1 | F | 5.4 |
| 78 | N/A | Thalamus | FFPE | Pilocytic astrocytoma | I | 1 | F | 6 |
| 66 | H3.3 | Pons | Frozen | DIPG | IV | N/A | M | 8 |
A total of 41 pediatric CNS tumor specimens were used in this study.
FFPE, formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded; WHO, World Health Organization; WT1, Wilms tumor protein.
FIGURE 1.WT1 expression is associated with pediatric CNS cancers. (A) Analysis of publicly available gene expression profiles of a larger cohort of pediatric GBMs. This analysis showed that WT1 is highly expressed in pediatric GBMs (n = 74) compared with pediatric healthy brain specimens (n = 22) (2.9-fold, p = 0.023). (B) qRT-PCR using cDNA from DIPG specimens validated WT1 overexpression in tumor (n = 5) versus normal (n = 5) within each patient (4.1-fold). (C) WT1 overexpression in tumor tissues was validated by Western blot assays using DIPG tumor specimens (n = 9) and adjacent normal specimens (n = 9). Quantification of the Western blot assays of DIPG tumor versus normal showed significantly higher expression of WT1 in the tumors (7.4-fold, p < 0.0001).
FIGURE 2.Demographic and clinical distribution of patients used for the study. Formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) specimens from a large cohort of pediatric CNS tumors (n = 41) were used in this study to examine the expression of WT1 in the tumors. The tumor grade of each specimen is represented by the orange shades. The driver and partner mutations were established using droplet PCR or WES. The specimens were checked for H3 mutation status by IHC only (n = 20; dark green boxes) or by either droplet PCR or WES (n = 16).
FIGURE 3.Immunohistochemistry of a large cohort of DIPGs indicated high expression of WT1 in H3.3 subtype compared with H3.1 subtype DIPGs. (A) IHC of a large cohort of DIPGs and pediatric midline gliomas showed WT1 overexpression in tumor compared with adjacent healthy brain tissue was valid. Scale bar = 50 µm. (B) Each tumor specimen was reviewed by a blinded neuropathologist and given an immunoreactivity score based on the number of WT1-positive cells. The pie chart shows the WT1 scores distribution of the specimens. (C) Examination of WT1 immunoreactivity scores revealed that WT1 scores of the specimens are associated with histone H3 mutation status. The distribution of WT1 immunoreactivity score was significantly different between H3.3 and H3.1 subtypes (Fisher exact test, p = 0.017). (D) qRT-PCR using cDNA from H3.3K27M DIPG tumor tissue (n = 3) and H3.1K27M DIPG tumor tissue (n = 2) showed higher expression of WT1 in H3.3K27M tumor specimens compared with H3.1K27M tumor specimens (6.4-fold).
FIGURE 4.Validation of WT1 differential expression in human DIPG primary cells. (A) A Western blot assay of WT1 using human DIPG primary cells (n = 6) and healthy brain tissue (HBT) lysates. (B) Quantification of the Western blot assays showed significantly higher WT1 in human DIPG primary cells compared with healthy brain tissue (3.63-fold, p = 0.047). (C) Human DIPG primary cells harboring H3.3K27M showed higher WT1 compared with human DIPG primary cells harboring H3.1K27M (2.83-fold) and histone H3 wildtype (2.86-fold). (D) Immunofluorescence staining of human DIPG primary cells (n = 2) showed WT1 expression in the tumor cells and localization of WT1, mainly in the cytoplasm of the tumor cells. The specificity of the antibody was validated by staining K562 cells, which showed WT1 localization in the nucleus. Scale bar = 30 µm.