| Literature DB >> 34068349 |
Joel Touma1,2, Yan Liu3,4, Afsar Rahbar5,6, Mattia Russel Pantalone5,6, Nerea Martin Almazan5,6, Katja Vetvik1,2, Cecilia Söderberg-Nauclér5,6, Jürgen Geisler2,7, Torill Sauer2,8.
Abstract
Emerging evidence supports a significant association between human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) and human malignancies, suggesting HCMV as a human oncomodulatory virus. HCMV gene products are found in >90% of breast cancer tumors and seem to be correlated with more aggressive disease. The definitive diagnosis of HCMV relies on identification of virus inclusions and/or viral proteins by different techniques including immunohistochemical staining. In order to reduce biases and improve clinical value of HCMV diagnostics in oncological pathology, automation of the procedure is needed and this was the purpose of this study. Tumor specimens from 115 patients treated for primary breast cancer at Akershus University Hospital in Norway were available for the validation of the staining method in this retrospective study. We demonstrate that our method is highly sensitive and delivers excellent reproducibility for staining of HCMV late antigen (LA), which makes this method useful for future routine diagnostics and scientific applications.Entities:
Keywords: HCMV; IHC; breast cancer; human cytomegalovirus; immunohistochemical staining
Year: 2021 PMID: 34068349 PMCID: PMC8153275 DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms9051059
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microorganisms ISSN: 2076-2607
Summary of conventional techniques used for detection of HCMV infection in different specimens.
| Method | Specimens | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| Serology | Blood | The presence of IgG determines that a patient has had HCMV infection in the past and is considered a carrier of latent virus. Detection of IgM without detectable IgG indicates acute primary infection, while detection of both IgM and IgG indicates reactivated HCMV infection. |
| Antigenemia | Blood | Use of monoclonal antibodies to detect the presence of HCMV pp65 in neutrophils during the early period of the virus replication cycle. Reported as number of pp65-positive cells per number of neutrophils counted. Sensitive but limited by the lack of automation, assay standardization and subjective interpretation. |
| Cell culture | Blood, Urine, Saliva | Conventional approach where clinical specimens are inoculated onto human fibroblasts, incubated and observed over time. Takes 2–21 days for reporting a result based on a morphological analysis. It is possible to obtain a faster detection of HCMV in culture already 24 h post-infection by using staining with anti-IE antibodies. Highly specific but low sensitivity for HCMV infection. |
| Polymerase Chain Reaction | Blood, Urine, Saliva, Tissue | Rapid and sensitive method based on amplification of nucleic acids. Targets even low levels of immediate early and late genes or transcripts. Quantitative nucleic acid amplification guides preemptive strategies, monitors response to therapy and is the preferred method for diagnosis of HCMV infection. |
| Immunohistochemical Staining | Blood, Urine, Saliva, Tissue | Monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies are applied against various HCMV proteins and visualized by dye or fluorescently labelled antibodies or enzyme/polymer labelled secondary antibodies, allowing morphological identification of HCMV in the specimen. It is a highly sensitive and very specific technique. Considered goldstandard for diagnosis in HCMV end-organ diseases. |
Figure 1Expression of HCMV-IE protein in HCMV infected lung tissue and normal non-infected breast tissue sections by automated IHC. HCMV-IE protein (brown color) was detected in HCMV infected lung tissue section (A) but not in uninfected normal breast tissues (C) by the use of an automated IHC approach. Primary antibody was omitted in both tissues sections and served as internal negative controls for IHC method (B,D). Original magnification ×20.
Figure 2Schematic presentation of the automated IHC process. Created with BioRender.com (accessed on 5 April 2021).
Figure 3Demonstration of HCMV IE and LA in breast cancer tissue specimens by using an automated IHC approach. Approximately estimated number of the tumor cells expressing HCMV-IE and LA within the breast tumor sections are scored as 0; <1%, 1; 1–24%, 2; 25–49%, 3; 50–74%, and 4; >75%. HCMV IE and LA (brown color) are expressed in the cytoplasm of the tumor cells. There was no HCMV IE grade 4 among our specimens. Original magnification ×20.
Results of HCMV IE and LA positivity in breast cancer specimens and breast cancer metastases, n = 111.
| HCMV-IE | HCMV-LA | |
|---|---|---|
| Grade 0 | 102 (91.9%) | 28 (25.2%) |
| Grade 1 | 4 (3.6%) | 27 (24.3%) |
| Grade 2 | 4 (3.6%) | 22 (19.8%) |
| Grade 3 | 1 (0.9%) | 17 (15.3%) |
| Grade 4 | 0 | 17 (15.3%) |
| Positive (Total) | 9 (8.1%) | 83 (74.8%) |
Figure 4Detection of HCMV transcripts in three different breast cancer cell lines over time of infection. While expression of HCMV-IE transcripts disappeared over time in MDA-MB-231 and MCF-7 cell lines, expression of HCMV-pp65 transcripts persisted and were enhanced over time of infection. Expression of HCMV-IE and HCMV-pp65 transcripts were also detectable in the SK-BR-3 cell line over time of infection and increased at 15 dpi. Transcript levels of HCMV-IE and HCMV-pp65 were normalized to housekeeping gene B2M at different time points (1, 5, 10, and 15 dpi) in three different breast cancer cell lines (MDA-MB 231 on the left, MCF-7 center, and SK-BR-3 on the right). Assays were performed in three separate experiments.