To determine the role of beta-catenin pathway in human skin carcinogenesis, 135 non-melanoma skin tumors were analyzed for beta-catenin expression and gene mutations. intense nucleo-cytoplasmic immunoreactivity for C terminus beta-catenin antibodies was observed in all pilomatricomas and in single cases of trichoepithelioma and squamous cell carcinoma showing peculiar signs of matrical differentiation. Moderate increase of beta-catenin nuclear staining was detected in a significant proportion of basal cell carcinomas, Bowen disease, spiroadenomas, and occasionally also in squamous; cell carcinomas, but in these neoplasms only a limited fraction of tumor cells accumulated beta-catenin. Molecular analysis revealed that beta-catenin gene mutations are a peculiar feature of skin tumors with matrical differentiation and correlate with a pattern of intense and diffuse beta-catenin nuclear expression. in contrast, adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) and AXIN2 mutations were not involved in skin tumorigenesis. Analysis of Wnt pathway revealed that TCF-1 and MITF-M were selectively induced in the tumor types harboring beta-catenin mutations, indicating that a Wnt/beta-catenin pathway involving TCF-1 and MITF-M is activated in these tumors. Interestingly, high expression levels of TCF-3 were found in basal cell carcinomas and spiroadenomas. TCF-3 is reported to act as a negative modulator of beta-catenin degradation pathway. Thus, the moderate increase of beta-catenin nuclear staining detected in these tumor types might, at least in part, be due to a TCF-3-dependent mechanism. Finally, we found that the presence of beta-catenin mutations significantly correlated with loss of nuclear immunoreactivity for an antibody raised against the N terminus of beta-catenin (alphaABC). Thus, a combined analysis with C terminus-beta-catenin antibodies and aABC Ab may represent a powerful investigative approach for the detection of beta-catenin structural alterations. Z8 0 ZR 0 ZS 0 ZB 36

Alterations of beta-catenin pathway in non-melanoma skin tumors - Loss of alpha-ABC nuclear reactivity correlates with the presence of O-catenin gene mutation

DOGLIONI , CLAUDIO;
2003-01-01

Abstract

To determine the role of beta-catenin pathway in human skin carcinogenesis, 135 non-melanoma skin tumors were analyzed for beta-catenin expression and gene mutations. intense nucleo-cytoplasmic immunoreactivity for C terminus beta-catenin antibodies was observed in all pilomatricomas and in single cases of trichoepithelioma and squamous cell carcinoma showing peculiar signs of matrical differentiation. Moderate increase of beta-catenin nuclear staining was detected in a significant proportion of basal cell carcinomas, Bowen disease, spiroadenomas, and occasionally also in squamous; cell carcinomas, but in these neoplasms only a limited fraction of tumor cells accumulated beta-catenin. Molecular analysis revealed that beta-catenin gene mutations are a peculiar feature of skin tumors with matrical differentiation and correlate with a pattern of intense and diffuse beta-catenin nuclear expression. in contrast, adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) and AXIN2 mutations were not involved in skin tumorigenesis. Analysis of Wnt pathway revealed that TCF-1 and MITF-M were selectively induced in the tumor types harboring beta-catenin mutations, indicating that a Wnt/beta-catenin pathway involving TCF-1 and MITF-M is activated in these tumors. Interestingly, high expression levels of TCF-3 were found in basal cell carcinomas and spiroadenomas. TCF-3 is reported to act as a negative modulator of beta-catenin degradation pathway. Thus, the moderate increase of beta-catenin nuclear staining detected in these tumor types might, at least in part, be due to a TCF-3-dependent mechanism. Finally, we found that the presence of beta-catenin mutations significantly correlated with loss of nuclear immunoreactivity for an antibody raised against the N terminus of beta-catenin (alphaABC). Thus, a combined analysis with C terminus-beta-catenin antibodies and aABC Ab may represent a powerful investigative approach for the detection of beta-catenin structural alterations. Z8 0 ZR 0 ZS 0 ZB 36
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11768/15004
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