Literature DB >> 8941212

A developmental model of neuroblastoma: differentiating stroma-poor tumors' progress along an extra-adrenal chromaffin lineage.

J C Hoehner1, C Gestblom, F Hedborg, B Sandstedt, L Olsen, S Påhlman.   

Abstract

The prognosis of children with neuroblastoma (NB) is dependent upon the patient's age at diagnosis, the location of the primary tumor, and histologic tumor cell differentiation. These characteristics, as well as the presumption that NB results from clonal expansion of primitive cells involved in sympathetic nervous system (SNS) development, predict that a model of tumorigenesis based upon normal fetal SNS histogenesis might indicate tumor progenitor status and define biologic and clinical behavior. Immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization were used to examine a panel of marker gene products predicted or shown to be expressed during SNS development in the normal human fetal SNS from 8 to 24 weeks' gestational age. A similar analysis was performed in a selection of clinical NB tumors, and the results were compared. In a subset of differentiating, often extra-adrenal NB tumors in patients who frequently had a favorable outcome; advancing morphologic tumor cell differentiation spatially paralleled an advancing fetal extra-adrenal chromaffin marker gene expression phenotype (ie, increasing TrkA, TrkC, TH, IGF-2, and neuron-specific enolase expression but a lack of phenylethanolamine N-methyltransferase expression). In these tumors, expression of gene products associated with normal fetal sympathetic ganglionic differentiation (ie, Bcl-2, HNK-1, and neuropeptide Y) was lost with morphologic tumor cell differentiation. In contrast, undifferentiated tumors, the majority of which were high stage, adrenal in origin, and prognostically unfavorable, displayed marker expression characteristics mirroring that of an early fetal ganglionic lineage. Thus, we show that morphologic differentiation in stroma-poor NB tumors, long held as an important prognostic feature in tumor grading systems, often corresponds to an extra-adrenal chromaffin rather than a ganglion cell or adrenal medullary chromaffin phenotype. Understanding the biology of extra-adrenal chromaffin tissues may provide an explanation for the clinically less aggressive nature of differentiating NB tumors and suggest potential mechanisms for spontaneous regression and/or treatment response.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8941212

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lab Invest        ISSN: 0023-6837            Impact factor:   5.662


  41 in total

1.  Heme Oxygenase Inhibition Sensitizes Neuroblastoma Cells to Carfilzomib.

Authors:  Ignazio Barbagallo; Cesarina Giallongo; Giovanni Li Volti; Alfio Distefano; Giuseppina Camiolo; Marco Raffaele; Loredana Salerno; Valeria Pittalà; Valeria Sorrenti; Roberto Avola; Michelino Di Rosa; Luca Vanella; Francesco Di Raimondo; Daniele Tibullo
Journal:  Mol Neurobiol       Date:  2018-06-10       Impact factor: 5.590

2.  Tat-PTD-modified oncolytic adenovirus driven by the SCG3 promoter and ASH1 enhancer for neuroblastoma therapy.

Authors:  Chuan Jin; Di Yu; Matko Čančer; Berith Nilsson; Justyna Leja; Magnus Essand
Journal:  Hum Gene Ther       Date:  2013-08       Impact factor: 5.695

3.  Up-regulation of insulin-like growth factor-II expression is a feature of TrkA but not TrkB activation in SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells.

Authors:  C J Kim; T Matsuo; K H Lee; C J Thiele
Journal:  Am J Pathol       Date:  1999-11       Impact factor: 4.307

4.  MicroRNA-542-5p as a novel tumor suppressor in neuroblastoma.

Authors:  Isabella Bray; Amanda Tivnan; Kenneth Bryan; Niamh H Foley; Karen M Watters; Lorraine Tracey; Andrew M Davidoff; Raymond L Stallings
Journal:  Cancer Lett       Date:  2011-04-01       Impact factor: 8.679

5.  MicroRNA-184-mediated inhibition of tumour growth in an orthotopic murine model of neuroblastoma.

Authors:  Amanda Tivnan; Niamh H Foley; Lorraine Tracey; Andrew M Davidoff; Raymond L Stallings
Journal:  Anticancer Res       Date:  2010-11       Impact factor: 2.480

6.  MYCN-regulated microRNAs repress estrogen receptor-alpha (ESR1) expression and neuronal differentiation in human neuroblastoma.

Authors:  Jakob Lovén; Nikolay Zinin; Therese Wahlström; Inga Müller; Petter Brodin; Erik Fredlund; Ulf Ribacke; Andor Pivarcsi; Sven Påhlman; Marie Henriksson
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2010-01-04       Impact factor: 11.205

7.  The growth inhibitory effect of 17-DMAG on ALK and MYCN double-positive neuroblastoma cell line.

Authors:  Bin Yi; Jixin Yang; Lizhong Wang
Journal:  Tumour Biol       Date:  2013-11-30

8.  High Myc pathway activity and low stage of neuronal differentiation associate with poor outcome in neuroblastoma.

Authors:  Erik Fredlund; Markus Ringnér; John M Maris; Sven Påhlman
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2008-09-09       Impact factor: 11.205

9.  HIF2A and IGF2 expression correlates in human neuroblastoma cells and normal immature sympathetic neuroblasts.

Authors:  Sofie Mohlin; Arash Hamidian; Sven Påhlman
Journal:  Neoplasia       Date:  2013-03       Impact factor: 5.715

10.  Tumor necrosis factor alpha regulates responses to nerve growth factor, promoting neural cell survival but suppressing differentiation of neuroblastoma cells.

Authors:  Yoshinori Takei; Ronald Laskey
Journal:  Mol Biol Cell       Date:  2007-12-19       Impact factor: 4.138

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