(American Journal of Pathology. 1998;153:1041-1053.)
© 1998 American Society for Investigative Pathology
Histopathological Evaluation of Apoptosis in Cancer
Y. Soini,
P. Pääkkö and
V-P. Lehto
From the Department of Pathology, University of Oulu and Oulu
University Hospital, Oulu, Finland
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Background
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The first observations of programmed cell death were made more
than a century ago, and the term "apoptosis" was coined for this
widely occurring phenomenon as early as 2 decades ago
1,2. However, it is only during the past few years that
serious mechanistic studies on it have been launched, leading to a
revelation of its basic molecular intricacies. Along with this,
investigators also working with clinical tumor material have obtained
new analytical tools to study the role of apoptosis in cancer. Indeed,
during the past years, there have been numerous papers in which
the occurrence and extent of apoptosis and its association with the
growth and progression of cancer have been studied in various types of
neoplasms. This is not surprising, because, in essence, tumor growth is
the net result of cell proliferation and cell loss. Rather, one may
wonder why it is that, after so many years of meticulous use of not
only mitotic count but also of more sophisticated proliferation markers
as pointers of cell growth, it is only now that "apoptotic index"
is becoming to be included among the parameters used to measure tumor
growth.
In the following, we first give a brief overview of the molecular
mechanisms of apoptosis. We then look at the role of apoptosis in
cancer. Finally, we review studies done on the occurrence and extent of
apoptosis in various types of tumors, and on the apoptotic index as a
prognostic marker. We also reflect on, as extracted from the literature
and based on our own experience, the currently used methods to
determine the number of apoptotic cells in tumor samples and their
limitations.
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Introduction
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Apoptosis is a complex, tightly regulated, and active cellular
process whereby individual cells are triggered to undergo
self-destruction in a manner that will neither injure neighboring cells
nor elicit any inflammatory reaction.3-6
Three phases can
be discerned in apoptosis: initiation phase, effector phase, and
degradation phase.7
In the initiation phase, the cells
receive a stimulus triggering the apoptotic process. In the effector
phase, apoptotic machinery is activated, but the process is still
reversible.7
In the degradation phase, a point of no return
is reached, beyond which the cell disintegrates.7
The duration of the process of apoptotic
cell death depends on the stimulus and the cell type and is usually
estimated to take from 12 to 24 hours.8
Visible changes in
cell morphology last for 2 to 3 hours and are associated with the
degradation phase.7,8
The characteristic oligonucleosomal
DNA fragmentation, manifesting itself as a ladder pattern in gel
electrophoresis, is also a late event.7,8
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Molecular Mechanisms of Apoptosis
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Caenorhabditis elegans and the CED Genes
Much of our knowledge about the molecular mechanisms and
regulation of apoptosis comes from the studies on Caenorhabditis
elegans.9,10
During development, 131 of its 1090 cells
are lost through apoptosis.9,10
This process is mainly
regulated by three genes, CED3, CED4, and
CED9, of which CED3 and CED4 are
positive regulators of apoptosis, whereas CED9 is
antiapoptotic.9,10
Homologous genes are found in higher
organisms. The apoptosis-inducing caspases and apaf-1 correspond to
CED3 and CED4, respectively, whereas the
well-known antiapoptotic bcl-2 corresponds to CED9.11-13
Induction of Apoptosis
A large number of stimuli can induce apoptosis in a cell
type-dependent manner.6,14
General inducers that act on
most types of cells include various chemotherapeutic agents,
ultraviolet and
-irradiation, heat, osmotic imbalance, high calcium,
and nitrogen oxide.6,14
A selective induction, on the other
hand, is seen, eg, in thymocytes that undergo massive apoptosis when
exposed to glucocorticoids.15
Also, ablation of a supply of
a trophic hormone or a growth factor leads to apoptosis of only those
cells that harbor the corresponding receptor.16,17
Depending on the triggering factor and the cell type, there are
multiple signaling pathways that lead to activation of the apoptotic
machinery. A few of them are briefly mentioned here. Apoptosis induced
by cytotoxic lymphocytes is mediated either by a nonsecretory,
ligand-induced, and receptor-mediated mechanism or by a secretory
perforin and granzyme-mediated mechanism.18
In cases of DNA
damage, apoptosis is initiated via p53-dependent pathway leading to
activation of mediators such as bax and KILLER/DR5.19,20
Withdrawal of a trophic factor, such as nerve growth factor in the case
of neural cells or serum in the case of fibroblasts, triggers an
apoptotic pathway mediated by p38 mitogen-activated protein
kinase.21
Changes in the composition of membrane
phospholipids may also initiate apoptosis.22-25
Radiation,
for instance, leads to an activation of sphingomyelinase resulting in
the degradation of sphingomyelin to ceramide.22,25
Ceramide-mediated apoptosis is launched also by several other factors,
such as serum deprivation, interleukin 1, tumor necrosis factor
,
1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3, and nerve growth factor
withdrawal.23
One of the best-known apoptotic pathways is the one emanating from
APO-1/FAS/CD95 receptor.7,18,26-28
It belongs to a family
of tumor necrosis factor-related receptor proteins and serves as a
receptor for APO-L, a ligand present on cytotoxic T
cells.18,28
Its engagement leads to an ushering of
cells toward apoptotic death.18,28
Downstream of
APO-1 is FADD/MORT1, which binds to the cytoplasmic end of
APO-1.28
Together, these two proteins form a death-inducing
signaling complex with FLICE, a member of a large family of
caspase proteins.28,29
It is caspases that during the past
few years have been extensively studied for their role in apoptosis.
Indeed, they have been identified as a common final pathway of the
execution of apoptosis in highly divergent systems.28
Caspases
Caspases are cysteine proteases that cleave their target proteins
at aspartic acid residues in a defined consensus sequence
context.30,31
Presently, at least 12 caspases are
known.30
They are expressed as precursors and are activated
in a cascade-like cleavage parade. It involves cleaving the molecule to
10- and 20-kd subunits, which then heterodimerize and associate into
tetramers that constitute the active enzyme.31,32
The noncaspase target proteins include, eg, proteins of the DNA repair
system, cytoskeletal or structural proteins, and
oncoproteins.33
Among the DNA repair enzymes is
poly(ADP-ribose)-polymerase, which, after DNA damage, catalyzes
attachment of ADP-ribose to nuclear proteins, such as
histones.33,34
Cytoskeletal or structural substrates
include nuclear lamins, fodrin, cytokeratin 18, actin, and catenin
ß.33,35-37
Best-known oncoproteins degraded by caspases
are the retinoblastoma protein (Rb) and mdm2.38,39
Recently, caspases have also been shown to activate DNase leading to
chromosomal breakage of DNA during apoptosis.40
The bcl-2 Family
The bcl-2 family is another group of closely related proteins that
plays a major role in apoptosis. It includes death-promoting and
death-inhibiting members.5,6,11,41-43
In a sense,
they can be considered to operate at checkpoints in which it is
determined whether a cell is ushered toward survival or death. They act
upstream of caspases.44
Apoptosis-inhibiting members of the bcl-2 family include bcl-2, bcl-xL,
bcl-w, bfl-1, brag-1, mcl-1, and A1.5,6,41-43
Apoptosis-promoting members are bax, bak, bcl-xS, bad, bid, bik, and
Hrk.5,6,41-43
Instrumental for their action is homo- and
heterodimerization, which occurs through their conserved
domains.5,6,41-43,45-47
They regulate apoptosis in a
rheostatic manner; in an excess of bax, for instance, bax homodimers
predominate, which favors apoptosis.5,6
Conversely, in an
excess of bcl-2, bcl-2/bax heterodimers are formed, which leads to
inhibition of apoptosis.5,6
Competition between family
members also has an effect. bcl-xL, for example, inhibits apoptosis by
binding and sequestering bax.6
By binding bcl-2 and bcl-xL,
bad, on the other hand, releases bax, which leads to bax
homodimerization and promotion of apoptosis.6
bcl-2 is the epitome of an antiapoptotic or survival gene. Attesting to
its role in an apoptosis checkpoint, it counteracts apoptosis initiated
by quite disparate signals, such as chemotherapeutic drugs, oxidative
stress, viral infections, and p53.6
In lymphoid cells, for
instance, bcl-2 inhibits apoptosis induced by glucocorticoids and
growth factor withdrawal.6
Indeed, in many cases, actions
of bcl-2 underlie the well-known survival functions of hormones and
growth factors. Thus, for example, in breast epithelial cells, estrogen
stimulation leads to upregulation of bcl-2 and resistance to
apoptosis.48
Upregulation of bcl-2 and bcl-xL is also
effected by interleukins.49,50
Many members of the bcl-2 family, such as bcl-2, bcl-xL, and bax, are
resident proteins of the mitochondrial membranes, endoplasmic
reticulum, and nuclear envelope in which they are inserted via their
carboxy-terminal ends.11,43,51
In mitochondria, they form
pores and act as ion channels.43,52-54
This is probably
the key to their function in apoptosis. Namely, induction of apoptosis
is almost invariably accompanied by disruption of the mitochondrial
transmembrane potential and release of caspase-activating substances,
such as cytochrome c and apoptosis-inducing factor, from the
mitochondria.43,52-54
Consistent with their role as
negative regulators of apoptosis, induction of expression of bcl-2 and
bcl-xL effectively counteracts the flow of these molecules to cytosol,
whereas bax promotes it.55,56
bcl-2 and bcl-xL counteract
induction of apoptosis also by binding to apaf-1, which prevents it
from activating pro-caspase-3.12,13
A very recent study has
demonstrated that caspase-3 is able to cleave the loop domain of bcl-2
at Asp,34
and that the carboxyl-terminal cleavage product
triggers and accelerates apoptosis.57
It remains to be seen
whether in tumors showing a positive association between bcl-2
expression and the extent of apoptosis, bcl-2 is present in a cleaved,
and thus, in fact, apoptosis-promoting form.
Ever since its discovery as an upregulated gene in t(14;18)
translocation in follicular lymphoma, bcl-2 has been considered as an
"oncogene."58
Now it has been revealed that its
apoptosis-promoting countervail bax is a bona fide tumor
suppressor gene. This is implied by a recent study of Rampino et
al,59
who have shown that more than 50% of colon cancers
exhibiting the microsatellite mutator phenotype contain disabling
somatic mutations in the Bax gene.59
None of the
microsatellite mutator phenotype-negative tumors showed any mutations.
Given the role of bax in apoptosis, this strongly supports the notion
that paralysis of the death machinery is, by way of leaving genetically
injured cells uneliminated, an important step in the progression of
cancer.
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Cancer Genes and Apoptosis
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One facet of the intertwinement of apoptosis and cancer is the
involvement of many oncogene and tumor suppressor gene products in the
regulation and execution of apoptosis. Among them are p53, Rb, ras,
raf, and myc. p53, because of its role in apoptosis, has earned the
name "guardian of the genome."60
It monitors the state
of DNA, and, in case of DNA damage, stalls the cell
cycle.60-62
This takes place through the induction of
CIP/WAF1/p21, a protein that prevents phosphorylation of
cyclin-dependent kinases, the well-known positive regulators of the
cell cycle.63,64
In the absence of phosphorylated, active
cyclin-dependent kinases, also another regulator of the cell cycle, Rb,
remains inactive (unphoshorylated), and, hence, the cell cycle
halts.65
This then leads to activation of DNA repair
machinery. If the DNA repair fails, p53 takes over again and triggers
apoptosis in a process that involves upregulation of the
apoptosis-inducing bax and down-regulation of the anti-apoptotic
bcl-2.19,60,66,67
p53 also upregulates KILLER/DR5, a novel
45-kd apoptosis-inducing member of the tumor necrosis factor receptor
family.20,68
Analogous to the APO-1/FAS/CD95 receptor
system, its activation also leads to a FLICE-mediated caspase
activation.20,68
Proto-oncogenes myc and ras are also part of the
apoptotic machinery. The role of myc is capricious, because
it depends critically on how the cell is "conditioned" by other
factors. Thus, in the presence of growth factors, it induces
proliferation, whereas in their absence, it acts
apoptotic.69
Overexpression of ras may lead to increased or decreased
apoptosis.70-72
It is negatively regulated by
bcl-2.73
Phosphorylation of bcl-2, however, invalidates its
capacity to protect cells from ras-induced
apoptosis.73
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Morphology of Apoptosis
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Several light and electron microscopically detectable changes
characterize apoptosis.1,3,4
They include, most
conspicuously, condensation of the chromatin to sharply delineated
granular masses along the nuclear envelope, shrinking of the cells,
convolution of the cellular and nuclear outlines, and fragmentation of
the nucleus.1,3,4
Finally, the cell disintegrates into
membrane-bound apoptotic bodies that contain, eg, nuclear remains, and
that are quickly removed by neighboring macrophages.1,4
Throughout this process, the cell membrane and the membrane encasing
the apoptotic fragments retain their integrity.1,4
Also,
the lysosomes remain intact and, hence, lysosomal enzymes are not
released to the surrounding tissues.1,4
Consequently, there
is no associated inflammation in apoptosis.1,4
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Apoptosis and Necrosis
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Necrosis, in contrast to apoptosis, is considered to be a passive
and a much more vaguely regulated event, the nature of which is
dictated more by the type of the external injurious agent than by the
internal workings of the cell.4
The most obvious difference
is that, whereas necrosis leads to a destruction of a large group of
cells in the same area, in apoptosis, only scattered cells are
involved.4
The basic mechanistic difference is that in
necrosis, because of membrane damage, there is swelling of the
cytoplasm and bursting of the cell, which leads to a release of
lysosomal enzymes and to inflammation.4
In apoptosis, the
outer cell membrane remains intact and the entire process is
"contained" without any harm done to the neighboring
cells.4
There are also differences in cellular morphology. Unlike in apoptosis,
in necrosis, the chromatin is never marginated. Rather, it is unevenly
distributed as clumps that are irregular and poorly
defined.4
Moreover, there is no nuclear fragmentation,
cellular shrinking, or "body" formation in necrosis.4
Although quite distinct by appearance and considered antithetical,
necrosis and apoptosis have been recently shown to be mechanistically
related, eg, in the following ways.8,52
First, in
vitro, certain stimuli are apoptotic at low doses but bring about
necrosis when present in high doses.8
Second, many stimuli,
such as heat shock, hypoxia, viruses, radiation, nitric oxide etc,
can induce both apoptosis and necrosis.8
Third, at a tissue
level, areas of necrosis are surrounded by a zone of apoptotic cells,
suggesting that they are associated phenomena.74
Relatedness between apoptosis and necrosis is also seen at a
biochemical level. Depletion of intracellular ATP in human T
cells shifts cell death from apoptosis to necrosis.75
Furthermore, caspases 8 and 10, which are located upstream in the
signaling pathway, can also provoke necrosis.8
This, on the
other hand, can be inhibited by the anti-apoptotic bcl-2 protein,
suggesting that at least part of the signaling machinery is
shared.8
The dual nature of the death process has remained enigmatic. One way to
settle this "apoptotic paradox" is to view the death process as a
dichotomous event, the direction of which is highly context
dependent.52
Experimental evidence for this includes
observations indicating that stimuli that under normal conditions lead
to apoptosis may initiate necrosis under conditions of low
intracel- lular ATP.8,75
Also, the availability of
apoptotic proteases, eg, activated caspases, direct the cell death
pathway such that sudden and extensive damage may exhaust the apoptotic
machinery, causing it to yield to necrosis.52
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Morphological Detection of Apoptosis
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Detection of apoptotic cells in tissue sections in, eg, tumors is
possible because of characteristic morphological features that are
manifest even in routinely stained sections.1,3,4
Recently,
more refined techniques have also been developed for tissue studies,
which are based on the detection of apoptosis-specific biochemical
changes or expression of apoptosis-associated proteins directly on
tissue sections.76-78
Thus, for instance, the
fragmentation of DNA into 180 to 200-bp fragments, the biochemical
hallmark of apoptosis, is being used in morphological analysis of
apoptosis.4
Such techniques make use of radioactive or
nonradioactive labeling of the free ends of the DNA, allowing accurate
identification of single apoptotic cells.76,78
This
technique, called in situ 3'-end labeling method, can be
divided in two variants. In the first, DNA polymerase or its Klenow
fragment is used to incorporate labeled nucleotides into fragmented DNA
by in situ nick translation.79,80
In terminal
deoxytransferase-mediated dUTP nick-end labeling (TUNEL), on the other
hand, terminal transferase is used to add labeled nucleotides into the
3'-end of the DNA.80
For the detection of the radioactive
label, autoradiography is used, whereas with nonradioactive labeling,
usually an appropriate chromogen reaction is used.
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Apoptotic Index
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In histological tumor material, apoptotic index is used as a
measure of the extent of apoptosis. Most often it is defined as a
percentage of apoptotic cells and bodies per all tumor cells. Some
authors, however, use it to denote the number of apoptotic cells per
1000 tumor cells.81
Furthermore, in some investigations,
apoptosis is measured as number of apoptotic cells per 10 high-power
fields.82
Table 1
shows a comprehensive list of
studies with apoptotic indexes reported for different types of tumors
by using either DNA end-labeling techniques (TUNEL) or plain
morphology. In all listed cases, the apoptotic index is given as a
percentage of apoptotic cells in tumor cell population.
It is readily apparent that there is a wide variation in the extent of
apoptosis not only between different tumors but also within a tumor
type (Table 1
and Figure 1
). In
high-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphomas, for instance, the average
apoptotic index varies between 1.4 and 8.8% and in small cell lung
carcinoma between 0.1 and 10.9%. Even though there may be biological
variations within the tumor groups (in carcinomas the relative number
of grade I, II, and III lesions may vary, and in lymphomas different
types of histological lesions may be variably represented), it is
quite unlikely that it could solely account for the observed
variability. Indeed, there are a number of methodological and technical
factors that may influence the determination of the apoptotic index.

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Figure 1. Variation in apoptotic index in different types of tumors in materials
processed and analyzed in a similar manner (data
are from 98, 106, 129, 130, 134, and 140
).
Of the tumors shown, low-grade malignant lymphomas have the lowest and
small cell lung carcinomas the highest apoptotic index. The values
presented represent averages, and wide variations between studies
(as noted in Table 1
) are
common.
|
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Detection of Apoptotic Cells
The extent of apoptosis may vary in different areas of the tumor
and, frequently, apoptotic cells appear in clusters.83
Consequently, to avoid erroneous results, care should be taken to
include enough fields in the analysis. It is estimated that at least 20
microscopic fields of 1000x magnification (containing an average of
1500 cells each) should be examined to guarantee
representativeness.83
The identification of apoptotic cells also depends on the magnification
used. With a lower magnification, fewer apoptotic cells are detected,
and there is an increase in interobserver variability83
Therefore, a high-power lens should be used.
One obvious cause for interobserver variation is error in counting the
number of tumor cells in a given field. An erroneous estimate of the
total number of tumor cells in the field easily changes the apoptotic
index severalfold.
The duration of the morphologically detectable phase of apoptosis may
vary and influence the apoptotic index.84
In tumors in
which detectable apoptotic changes take a longer time, the apoptotic
index is higher, even though the actual number of cells undergoing
apoptosis would be the same.84
Because of this, the
apoptotic index cannot be correlated with an actual "death index,"
even though technical problems with measuring the apoptotic index could
be solved.
Nonneoplastic apoptotic cells may also pose a problem for the
estimation of the apoptotic index. This is the case especially in
lymphomas, in which apoptotic macrophages and lymphocytes may resemble
apoptotic neoplastic cells. Moreover, neoplastic cells may even
stimulate apoptosis in reactive cells. This can take place if tumor
cells express FAS-L on their surface.85,86
The ligand may
associate with the APO-1/FAS/CD95 receptor of the invading normal
T lymphocytes and trigger apoptosis in them.85,86
Apoptotic
T lymphocytes mistakenly counted as apoptotic tumor cells would give a
distorted view of the relationship between apoptosis and tumor growth.
False Positives and Negatives
Other sources of misinterpretation lie in the differences in the
sensitivities and specificities of the end-labeling techniques and in
such technicalities as, for instance, the type of pretreatment, the
type of labeling enzyme, the method of tissue processing,
and incubation times.79,87,88
It seems to be a common experience that performance of TUNEL labeling
depends greatly on the tissue pretreatment, concentration of the
terminal transferase enzyme, and the type and concentration of the
fixative (Table 2)
.80,87,89,90
Ethanol
fixation, for example, is associated with diminished staining intensity
and increased background staining compared with 10% buffered
formalin.88
Of the tissue pretreatments, microwave
treatment of the formalin-fixed tissue raises the number of labeled
cells twofold compared with proteinase K pretreatment.80
In the in situ 3'-end labeling method by in situ
nick translation, a high concentration of or a prolonged incubation
with polymerase leads to a gradual increase of the labeling of the
morphologically normal nuclei.79
The number and intensity
of the labeled nuclei also depends on the duration of the tissue
pretreatment with pepsin or proteinase K; a brief treatment leaves many
apoptotic cells unlabeled, whereas too long a pretreatment results in
labeling of morphologically nonapoptotic nuclei.79,87
In
the studies referred to in Table 1
, proteinase K at a concentration of
20 to 40 µg/ml for 15 minutes was usually used. In many studies,
however, there is no mention of the proteinase K concentration.
A further caveat of the end labeling methods is that cells other than
apoptotic cells can also become labeled. Such false positives are seen
especially in cases with DNA damage, autolysis, tissue drying, and
necrosis.87,89,91
Conversely, formalin fixation of a long
duration can give rise to "false negatives" because of a decreased
labeling of apoptotic cells.92
The lowest numbers of apoptotic cells are usually scored in light
microscopy based solely on morphology (Table 1)
. This may be due to the
fact that morphological manifestations of apoptosis, such as shrinking
of the nucleus, are of such a short duration or inconspicuous that they
could go partially undetected. Results obtained by "plain"
morphology show, however, a good correlation with DNA end labeling
methods.93,94
Thus, morphology alone, although less
sensitive, is a fairly reliable and inexpensive method for the
detection of apoptosis.
Comparison of in situ nick translation and TUNEL shows that
TUNEL is more sensitive.87,88
This could be at least
partially due to the ability of terminal transferase (used in TUNEL) to
label both double- and single-stranded DNA breaks, whereas polymerase I
(of in situ nick translation) only labels single-stranded
breaks.80,88
Also, the kinetics of the enzymes are
different; DNA polymerase I is slower than terminal transferase in
incorporating nucleotides.87
In investigations on clinical
tumor material, the TUNEL technique has almost exclusively been used.
 |
Occurrence of Apoptosis in Human Tumors
|
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Lymphomas
High-grade malignant non-Hodgkin's lymphomas show a significantly
higher apoptotic index than low-grade lymphomas (Figure 2)
.95-98
This
correlates nicely with the occurrence of antiapoptotic bcl-2, which is
overexpressed in low-grade follicular lymphomas due to a translocation
that takes the bcl-2 locus to a highly active chromosomal
environment.58
In fact, there is an inverse association
between the immunohistochemical expression of bcl-2 and the apoptotic
index.95,98
Also, other members of the bcl-2 group, such as
the apoptosis-promoting bax and apoptosis-inhibiting mcl-1, are
expressed in lymphomas.98,99
They are also seen in
Reed-Sternberg cells of Hodgkin's disease.100,101
A
potentially important factor is Epstein-Barr virus, which is found in
Hodgkin's disease, in some other lymphomas, and also in some
nonlymphoid neoplasms such as gastric and nasopharyngeal
carcinomas.102-104
Its latent membrane protein 1
upregulates bcl-2 and can, in this way, influence the extent of
apoptosis.105

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Figure 2. Difference in the extent of apoptosis between high-grade and low-grade
lymphomas (data from Ref. 98
). High-grade lymphomas display a
significantly higher extent of apoptosis than do low-grade lymphomas.
|
|
Breast Carcinomas
In breast carcinomas, a high extent of apoptosis is associated
with a poor prognosis, and more apoptosis is seen in tumors of high
grade (Figures 3 and 4)
.82,106
This is probably due to a loss of receptors for hormones that act as
survival factors. Interestingly, in breast carcinomas, concurrent
expression of progesterone or estrogen receptors and of antiapoptotic
bcl-2 can be seen.82,107
This correlates with the cell
culture studies that show that stimulation of the estrogen receptors
leads to upregulation of bcl-2.108
bcl-2 expression is seen
in 70% of breast carcinomas, and its expression is inversely
associated with the apoptotic index and with a better
prognosis.82,106,109,110

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Figure 3. Relation of the extent of apoptosis with different types of breast
lesions (data from Ref. 106
). The extent of apoptosis increases parallel
with the neoplastic potential of the breast lesion.
|
|

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Figure 4. Relation of bcl-2 expression with different types of breast lesions
(data from Ref. 106
).
bcl-2 is inversely related to the neoplastic potential of the breast
lesion.
|
|
Endometrial Carcinomas
Apoptosis is increased in high-grade endometrial adenocarcinomas
and is more pronounced in tumor areas with a solid growth
pattern.111,112
To some extent, this correlates inversely
with the expression of bcl-2, which is strongly expressed in epithelial
cells of the normal endometrium but reduced in atypical hyperplasias
and carcinomas.113,114
The expression of bcl-2 is
associated with a lower extent of apoptosis.112
Prostate Carcinoma
In prostate cancer as well, hormones acting as survival factors
and their receptors play a role. It is well known that androgen
deprivation leads to apoptosis of normal prostate epithelial cells and
tumor cells.115,116
Characteristic of prostatic carcinoma
cells is that further down in the course of progression, they tend to
gain resistance to the apoptosis-inducing hormone
withdrawal.117
High bcl-2 expression is found in
androgen-independent prostate tumors, suggesting that bcl-2
upregulation contributes to the survival of neoplastic cells in a
hormonally deprived environment.118
In line with this, the
extent of apoptosis was found to be lower in recurrent than primary
tumors.119
bcl-2 positivity is found in only 25% of
prostate carcinomas and is reported to be higher in high-grade tumors
(Table 3
and Figure 5
).120
Another antiapoptotic
factor, mcl-1, is expressed in 81% of prostate carcinomas and is also
more frequently seen in high-grade tumors.120
Even though
there is a decrease in apoptosis in recurring tumors, and the
expression of antiapoptotic bcl-2 and mcl-1 is higher in high-grade
tumors, increased apoptosis has been associated with a poor
prognosis.121

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Figure 5. Variation in bcl-2 expression in different types of carcinomas
(data are from references shown in Table 3
). Highest bcl-2 expression is seen in thyroid
and endometrial carcinomas, whereas lowest expression is seen in lung
adenocarcinoma and hepatocellular carcinoma.
|
|
Thyroid and Adrenal Tumors
More apoptosis is found in thyroid carcinomas with a low degree of
differentiation.122
There is an inverse association between
the bcl-2 expression and apoptosis in papillary thyroid carcinomas but
not thyroid cancers of other histological types.122
In adrenal cortical tumors, apoptosis is reported to be lower or at the
same level as in nonneoplastic tissues.123,124
In cell
culture studies, bovine adrenocortical cells undergo apoptosis in
adrenocorticotropic hormone-free culture conditions.125
Gastrointestinal Carcinomas
In gastric and colon carcinomas, lower apoptotic indexes have been
reported in early than in advanced-stage lesions, but there are also
opposing results.81,126
Positive bcl-2 immunoreactivity is
found in 43 and 67% of the gastric and colon carcinomas, respectively,
and its occurrence seems to be inversely associated with apoptosis
(Table 3
and Figure 5
).126,127
Stronger bcl-2 expression
was associated with gastric carcinomas of the diffuse
type.128
On the other hand, expression of bax, mcl-1, and
bcl-X was more frequent in the intestinal type.128
In pancreatic and hepatocellular carcinomas, no association is found
between apoptosis and the grade of tumor or survival of the
patients.129,130
Among liver carcinomas, hepatocellular
carcinomas show a much lower bcl-2 expression than cholangiocarcinomas
(Table 2)
.131-133
This is analogous to bcl-2 expression in
the nonneoplastic liver; normal hepatocytes do not express bcl-2,
whereas a high degree of expression is seen in small bile
ducts.131,133
Lung Carcinomas
In non-small cell lung carcinomas (NSCLCs), no association between
apoptosis and survival or advanced stage of the tumor is usually found,
but again, there are also conflicting reports.134-137
In
NSCLCs, bcl-2 expression can be seen in only 8 to 30% of the cases,
whereas in small cell lung carcinomas, it is present in
90%.138,139
Curiously enough, small cell lung carcinomas
have a higher apoptotic index than NSCLCs, even though their bcl-2
expression is high.140,141
Urogenital Carcinomas
In transitional cell carcinomas of the bladder, high-grade tumors
display a higher apoptotic index.142
bcl-2 expression is
low, ranging from 5 to 25% in different reports.142,143
A
similar low frequency of bcl-2 expression is also found in transitional
cell carcinomas of the renal pelvis and in renal cell
adenocarcinoma.144,145
Other Tumors
Other tumor groups have been less extensively studied, and in many
cases only single reports are available. In brain tumors, more
apoptosis is seen in grade II gliomas compared with grade III lesions,
suggesting that apoptosis contributes to a better
prognosis.146
Glioblastomas, however, have a higher
apoptotic index than better-differentiated tumors.146
Also in germ cell tumors, apoptosis varies in histologically different
types of tumors, being highest in the more aggressive and
less-differentiated ones, such as embryonal carcinomas.147
Interestingly, bcl-2 expression was only found in teratocarcinomas but
not in other germ cell tumors.147
Apoptosis in sarcomas and mesenchymal tumors has not been studied
extensively. The apoptotic index in most sarcomas is generally between
0 and 6%.141
Premalignant Lesions
In atypical hyperplasias and in in situ carcinomas of
the breast, a rise in the apoptotic index and a decrease in the bcl-2
immunoreactivity is associated with the grade of the
lesion.106
In endometrial atypical hyperplasias and in
esophageal Barrett's metaplasia or dysplasia, a decrease in bcl-2
immunoreactivity was also seen.148
Thus, in these cases,
the idea of less apoptosis promoting the early steps of carcinogenesis
is not sustained, at least in its simplistic form. Rather, in light of
these examples, a high degree of apoptosis in premalignant lesions can
be considered to be a reflection of an ardent effort to eliminate
genetically damaged cells. This, in fact, has been suggested in studies
on apoptosis in gastric premalignant lesions and in dysplasias of the
oral cavity, which show that the apoptotic index may be even higher in
dysplastic lesions than in the corresponding invasive
carcinomas.149,150
On the other hand, in dysplastic lesions of the colon and stomach,
there is an increase of bcl-2 immunoreactivity compared with invasive
tumors.127,151,152
This finding has been appropriately
interpreted to mean that dysplastic, most likely genetically
compromised, cells thus become saved from apoptosis, which contributes
to the neoplastic progression. Clearly, further studies are needed to
get a comprehensive view on apoptosis and its regulating proteins in
preneoplastic lesions.
 |
Why Is There Increased Apoptosis in Cancer?
|
|---|
It is obvious from the considerations above that apoptosis is
generally increased in cancer. In fact, there are only a few tumors,
such as follicular B-cell lymphomas, in which inhibition of apoptosis
has been convincingly shown to play a decisive role in the development
of neoplasia.58
On the other hand, occurrence of apoptosis
does not show any single rule in its relation to tumor stage, grade, or
progression. Rather, a high degree of tumor-dependent variability is
seen.
Why then is it that apoptosis is so often increased in tumors? Part of
the explanation probably lies in the activation of cancer genes in the
process of neoplastic development, some of which also influence
apoptosis. In such cases, the degree of apoptosis is a reflection of
the internal functioning of the death machinery. In other cases,
apoptosis is due to extrinsic factors such as activated T cells that
launch a FAS-mediated apoptosis in tumor cells.
Loss of Cell Adhesion and Hypoxia Enhance Apoptosis
One cell biological explanation for apoptosis in tumor cells is
the increased sensitivity to apoptosis of cells that have lost their
matrix attachment or cell-cell contacts.153
This could be
due, for instance, to a loss of an expression of cell adhesion
molecules from the surface of the neoplastic cells. Especially
important in this sense are integrin and cadherin
molecules.154
Still another factor that is conducive to
apoptosis in tumors are the hypoxic conditions that prevail in tumors.
For instance, in experimental brain necrosis of rats, apoptosis is seen
primarily in the area bordering the ischemic zone.74
Also
in tumors, an increased number of apoptotic cells are seen adjacent to
necrotic areas.155
Apoptosis and Proliferation Are Mechanistically Linked
A consistent feature in many studies is the positive correlation
or association between apoptosis and proliferation, suggesting that
they are mechanistically linked (see Table 4
). One link relates to the fact that
although apoptosis may be initiated in any phase of the cell cycle, the
majority of cells undergo apoptosis primarily in the G1 phase of
cycling cells.156
In fact, many proteins that operate in
the cell cycle checkpoints are also regulators and inducers of
apoptosis. Examples of such are p53 and Rb proteins, which act on the
G1/S checkpoint. Also, overexpression of cyclins, such as cyclins D1,
A, and B, can induce apoptosis.157-161
 |
Concluding Remarks
|
|---|
Even though there is a high degree of variability in the apoptotic
index reported by different authors for the same types of tumors, some
generalizations on apoptosis and its associations with some clinical
and biological parameters can be made. In lymphomas and
hormone-dependent epithelial tumors, such as breast, endometrial, or
thyroid carcinomas, a higher extent of apoptosis is associated with
tumors of a higher grade. This is in contrast to other epithelial
tumors, in which association with tumor grade is variable and less
evident. Another feature is that the apoptotic index in most tumors is
associated with cell proliferation, suggesting a mechanistic link
between these two mechanisms.
Because proliferation and apoptosis contribute to tumor growth, some
authors have created compound indexes taking into consideration the
influence of both proliferation and apoptosis and even
necrosis.129,143,150
In these studies, the ratio between
apoptotic and mitotic index was higher in dysplasias than in invasive
carcinomas, suggesting that apoptosis is overwhelmed by cell
proliferation in invasive lesions.145,149
In hepatocellular
carcinomas, tumors showing a high extent of proliferation and a low
extent of apoptosis and necrosis had a significantly worse prognosis
than other tumors.129
Thus, it seems to be more reasonable
to combine apoptosis and proliferation, and perhaps also include
necrosis, to a common index when evaluating their impact on tumor
growth and prognosis in various neoplasias. Indeed, when evaluated
alone, the extent of apoptosis does not generally associate with
survival (see Table 5
).
Finally, the studies show that in the evaluation of the apoptotic index
there are technical and methodological problems. To reduce
interobserver variations, a consent on the criteria of how to define
and calculate the "apoptotic index" is needed. As far as the
methodological factors are concerned, at least some standard protocols
on tissue processing, protease pretreatments, incubations, etc., should
be pursued. Also, applying more than one method to determine apoptosis
would improve the accuracy and reliability. For instance, inclusion of
a plain morphological evaluation of apoptosis with the 3'-end labeling
method would be an inexpensive and straightforward complement to the
investigation.
 |
Footnotes
|
|---|
Address reprint requests to Dr. Ylermi Soini, Department of Pathology, University of Oulu, Kajaanintie 52 D, FIN-90220 Oulu, Finland. E-mail:
msoini{at}cc.oulu.fi
Accepted for publication May 22, 1998.
 |
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