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From the Institute of Pathology and Forensic Medicine,*
Zhejiang University Medical School, Zhejiang, China; and the Institute
of Pathology,
Würzburg University,
Würzburg, Germany
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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However, all these molecular studies have usually narrowly focused on the role of a particular individual gene in the pathogenesis of the disease and did not investigate the sequence and relationship between the genetic abnormalities detected. The aforementioned CGH study identified several nonrandom losses or gains of genetic material suggesting the presence of tumor suppressor genes or oncogenes, respectively, whose function is altered during the process of malignant transformation. It identified the chromosomal regions involved, but not the individual genes. To do that, a method that can detect also amplifications or deletions in the range of tens of base pairs like microsatellite analysis has to be applied. This method has also the advantage of simultaneously detecting microsatellite instability caused by dysfunction of mismatch-repair genes recently described in epithelial cancer.23 Therefore, we performed a limited genomic search with 48 highly informative microsatellite markers on 26 thymoma cases, including types A, B3, and C tumors, aiming to identify gene loci involved in the pathogenesis of thymomas. In this work, we characterize the genetic aberrations common in the analyzed thymomas and compare the new WHO classification with the grouping of thymomas based on our allelotype data.
| Materials and Methods |
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Twenty-six thymic epithelial tumors lacking heavy lymphocyte
contamination including 8 thymomas of WHO type A, 14 of WHO type B3,
and 4 cases of type C from the thymoma collection at the Institute of
Pathology in Würzburg, on whom fresh-frozen tissue (2 WHO type A,
7 type B3, and 2 type C) or formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue (6
WHO type A, 7 type B3, and 2 type C) was available, were selected for
the study. The diagnosis was established according to the criteria of
the new WHO Thymic Epithelial Tumor Classification4
by
morphological and immunophenotypic analyses of paraffin-embedded and
fresh-frozen tissue sections using standard staining methods as
described recently.14,24
Clinical data on the analyzed
thymoma patients are listed in Table 2
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In each case, 20 serial 10-µm-thick tissue sections were cut. The first and last cuts were stained with hematoxylin and eosin to assure high tumor content and as guidance for the following dissection. The fresh-frozen tissue sections were visualized under microscope and an area showing thymoma was scraped using a blade. In a similar way, control genomic DNA was derived from separate tissue blocks not involved by the tumor. Paraffin-embedded, formalin-fixed tissue sections were additionally stained by Nuclear-Fast Red to precisely delineate tumor-containing areas and the collected tissue deparaffinized with xylene before digestion. DNA extraction was performed using proteinase K and phenol-chloroform according to routine molecular biology protocols.25
Microsatellite Analysis
Primer sequences for the amplification of microsatellite
repeats listed in Table 3
were retrieved
from Genome Database (GDB, http://gdbwww.gdb.org). Polymerase
chain reaction (PCR) primers were synthesized at MWG Biotech (Munich,
Germany) and one oligonucleotide of each primer pair labeled with
fluorescent dye phosphoramidites FAM, TAMRA, or HEX. Paired normal and
tumor DNA samples from each patient were amplified with AmpliTaq Gold
enzyme (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA) in multiplex PCR reactions
using 50 ng of genomic DNA as template under conditions specified by
GDB. Thirty cycles were performed in a MWG Primus Gold thermal cycler
(MWG Biotech, Munich, Germany) in a total volume of 20 µl. Aliquots
of the PCRs were then mixed with size standard and formamide,
denatured, and subjected to electrophoresis on a 377 DNA Sequencer
(Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA). The automatically collected data
were analyzed using the Genescan and Genotyper software as
described in the manufacturers manual. Only patients heterozygous for
a given locus were regarded to be informative, homozygosity and
microsatellite instability rendered the particular locus uninformative
for loss of heterozygosity (LOH) or amplification. In heterozygous
cases, ratios of both alleles in normal and tumor tissues were
calculated. If these ratios showed a difference of >20%, the locus
was further evaluated for possible allelic imbalance. For determination
of LOH or amplification, first the unchanged allele was identified (by
comparison with other microsatellites showing no change in the same
multiplex PCR), then the ratios of the allele showing decreased or
increased signal to the unchanged allele were calculated, first for
control DNA, then for the tumor. Increase of the ratio by 40% in the
tumor as compared to the control was called amplification, decrease by
40% LOH. All aberrations were confirmed two times. Regional allelic
imbalance (RAI) was defined as percentage of regions showing allelic
imbalance (31 regions listed in Table 3
were investigated altogether).
Patients on whom the results for at least two regions were not
evaluable (not all formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue derived DNA
could be amplified) were excluded from the comparison (case no.
6902 and no. 2901).
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CGH methods and results on 19 tumors from the investigated group were published previously.18
Immunohistochemical Staining for hMSH2 and hMLH1
Immunohistochemical staining for hMSH2 (hybridoma clone FE11; Calbiochem, San Diego, CA) and hMLH1 (hybridoma clone G168-15; Pharmingen, San Diego, CA) was performed on pressure cooker-pretreated, formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue sections and visualized using standard immunoperoxidase technique. Normal tissue of the same patient served as a control. A case was considered positive for each antigen, when >80% of the tumor cells showed strong nuclear staining as compared to normal cells on the same slide.
| Results |
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Twenty-six thymoma cases listed in Table 2
including 8 WHO type A,
14 type B3, and 4 type C tumors were screened for loss or amplification
of genomic DNA using 48 microsatellite repeats (Table 3)
. The repeats
were chosen to cover loci of known and putative oncogenes or tumor
suppressor genes and regions showing frequent aberrations in
cytogenetic and CGH studies on lung, head, and neck squamous cell
carcinomas,26-28
and hot spots of aberrations detected in
a previous CGH study performed on part of the same
material.18
Out of 882 informative genotypes (not all
formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue-derived DNA could be
amplified), 105 (11.9%) showed LOH, 6 (0.7%) amplification of genomic
DNA. Several regions on various chromosomes revealed allelic imbalance
in at least three cases; the frequency of such aberrations is depicted
in Figure 1
. To distinguish LOH from
amplification, multiplex PCRs were performed using unaffected repeats
as an internal control. The results were further confirmed by CGH in
the majority of patients (Figure 2)
.18
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The most frequent LOH was found in the 6q23.3-25.3 chromosomal
region (Table 3)
as detected by markers D6S310 and D6S441 in 11 (45.8%
of informative cases) tumors (3 type A, 5 type B3, and 3 type C
thymomas, Figure 1
). The second hot spot of deletions was located in
the 6p21 region (assayed for by markers D6S1666 and D6S1560) containing
the major histocompatibility (MHC) classes I and II gene loci, with
seven (33.3% of informative analyses) tumors (two type A, four type
B3, and one type C) showing an involvement. Other frequent LOHs were
located in regions 3p22-24.2, 3p14.2 (FHIT gene locus), 5q21 (APC gene
locus), 6q21-22.1, 7p21-22, 13q14 (RB gene locus), and 17p13.1 (p53
tumor suppressor gene locus). However, two thymomas (both type B3,
patients no. 6175 and no. 10585) showed LOH with all repeats on
chromosome 6 suggesting monosomy 6 (confirmed by fluorescence in
situ hybridization later, unpublished results) to be the cause of
LOH in these two cases. Similarly, two other type B3 tumors (no. 6175
and no. 15904) showed LOH with all nine microsatellite markers on
chromosome 3, suggesting the presence of monosomy 3 in these patients.
Thymic Epithelial Tumors Show Two Distinct Patterns of Genetic Aberrations
Interesting associations emerged comparing aberrations common to
the analyzed thymoma types. We could identify two groups of tumors
characterized by specific mutually exclusive aberrations (Figure 3)
. The first one consisted of 11 (45.8%
of informative analyses) thymomas displaying the 6q23.3-25.3 LOH.
Another group was made up by four (15% of informative analyses) tumors
showing the APC tumor suppressor gene locus (5q21) deletion. The APC
aberrations showed statistically significant associations with LOH in
the 3p22-24.2 (chi-square test, Yates correction; P =
0.045), 13q14 (chi-square test, Yates correction; P =
0.0055), and 17p13.1 (chi-square test, Yates correction;
P = 0.0003) regions. The rest of the analyzed thymomas
displayed either other heterogeneous aberrations (seven cases) or no
aberrations at all (four cases). Thymomas of all three WHO types were
among the tumors showing the 6q23.3-25.3 deletion. In contrast, none of
the type A patients was detected to have an LOH in the APC, RB, and p53
gene loci or the 3p22-24.2 and 8q11.21-11.23 regions. The 6q23.3-25.3
deletion occurred already in stage I disease and was present in all
higher stages thereafter. The APC LOH was exclusively associated with
later stages (III or IV) of disease.
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We used the frequency of RAI (see Materials and Methods) displayed
by these tumors to assess the degree of genomic instability associated
with different thymoma stages, regardless of the WHO thymoma type
(Figure 4)
. Stage I thymomas showed RAI
with mean of 4.1% and SD of 4.2%, only seven regions exhibiting
allelic imbalances were detected. In Stage II, regions affected by
aberrations numbered 8, the RAI increased to 8 ± 4.7%. In stage
III, the number of regions showing aberrations rose to 19 including the
APC tumor suppressor gene locus, the RAI showed an increase to 16
± 14.8%. Only four patients presented with a stage IV thymoma and
that seemed to influence the results of the statistical analysis;
merely 15 various regions showed an allelic imbalance, the RAI
frequency was 15.2 ± 10%. The RAI frequency difference between
stages I and IV proved to be statistically significant (Mann-Whitney
U test, P = 0.027).
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Six (0.5%) of 1178 genotypes proved to be microsatellite instability (MSI)-positive in these tumors. Interestingly, all of the MSI-positive repeats detected were clustered in only one tumor, a type B3 thymoma (no. 11859). In this particular case, the frequency of MSI was low-level, with six (12.5%) repeats (D3S1300, D6S1666, D6S447, D8S532, D12S78, P53p) showing MSI. Immunohistochemical staining for protein products of the mismatch repair genes hMSH2 and hMLH1 was performed to investigate the cause of MSI in this case further. However, most of the tumor cells presented strong nuclear staining meaning the hMSH2 and hMLH1 proteins were present (results not shown). MSI in this tumor thus did not originate from aberrations in the hMSH2 or hMLH1 mismatch repair genes. Microscopic review of the histology of the case confirmed a typical pattern of a WHO type B3 thymoma without any unusual findings.
| Discussion |
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LOH in the 6q23.3-25.3 region was the most frequent aberration (11 cases, 45.8% of informative cases) detected in this work. Losses of genomic DNA in this region occurred in all three thymoma types and in all disease stages analyzed. They were the sole aberration in two patients, but mostly were accompanied by other allelic imbalances. Deletions and rearrangements involving chromosome 6q have been reported in a number of human malignancies, including breast carcinoma,29 malignant melanoma,30 renal cell carcinoma,31 salivary gland adenocarcinoma,32 ovarian carcinoma,33 acute lymphoblastic leukemia,34 and nodal non-Hodgkins lymphoma.35 We described several hot spots of deletions on the long arm of chromosome 6 in extranodal gastric high-grade large B-cell lymphoma previously.36 One of the hot spots was detected in the region 6q23.3-25.3 between the markers D6S310 to D6S441 used in this thymoma study as well. This region contains, in addition to tens of unidentified expressed sequence tag (ESTs), several already cloned genes, eg, IGF2R, MAP3K5, and ZAC. Interestingly, the ZAC tumor suppressor gene has been shown to inhibit tumor cell proliferation in vitro and in vivo in nude mice37 and its expression was found to be lost or reduced in breast cancer cell lines and primary breast tumors.38 Whatever gene is the target of deletions here, it seems to define a particularly important early event in thymoma pathogenesis.
A smaller but distinct group of four cases presented with LOH in the
APC tumor suppressor gene locus in the chromosomal region 5q21. These
tumors were WHO type B3 thymomas in late stages of disease. All four
displayed additional 17p13.1 LOH (chi-square test, Yates correction;
P = 0.0003) in the p53 tumor suppressor gene locus.
Three revealed concomitant LOH in the 5q21 and 3p22-24.2 regions
(chi-square test, Yates correction; P = 0.045),
another three concomitant LOH in the 5q21 and 13q14 (retinoblastoma
tumor suppressor gene) regions (chi-square test, Yates correction;
P = 0.0055). APC aberrations, which generally lead to a
truncated APC protein or take form of allele loss, can be detected in
75% of sporadic colorectal cancers, already in the earliest
adenomas from which these cancers develop.39,40
They are
considered to be initiating events in colorectal cancerogenesis.
Additional genetic aberrations are required for the progression from
adenoma to carcinoma. One of the hallmarks of such a progression is the
loss of function of the p53 tumor suppressor gene allowing cells to
accumulate additional mutations throughout the genome. A significant
minority of thymic epithelial tumors thus share a similar set of
aberrations with colorectal cancer. To which extent this similarity
reflects the similarity of pathogenetic pathways of both colorectal
cancer and thymoma remains to be investigated. However, we did not find
any APC aberrations in early thymomas of stage I or II, just the 6q
aberrations. It is thus possible that these neoplasms exhibit a similar
series of aberrations, but the succession of the aberration
events, which aberrations are initiating and which then follow in later
stages of disease, may be different.
The second most frequently detected aberration (seven tumors, 33.3% of
informative cases) was LOH in the 6p21 region. This very well-mapped
and already sequenced region contains among others the genes for tumor
necrosis factor-
, CDKN1A, and MHC. Loss of MHC genes has been
reported in numerous tumors recently.41,42
The MHC class I
and II genes encode highly polymorphic cell surface glycoproteins that
bind antigenic peptides for presentation to CD4 and CD8 bearing
cytotoxic T lymphocytes, respectively.43
Because of the
role of the MHC molecules in presenting immunogenic peptides to
cytotoxic T cells, defects in the MHC genes expression allow the tumor
cells to evade the immune response that might be expected to be
generated after multiple mutations of genes, whose abnormal products
are potential targets for the immune system. Allelic loss of the MHC
genes may thus confer a clonal selective advantage, providing tumor
cells with a mechanism to escape recognition by the immune defense
system.44
This selection pressure would explain why the
MHC gene loss was present in all investigated thymomas with such a high
frequency.
Generally, during progression from low- to high-grade disease or from
early to later stages, tumors acquire additional genetic aberrations
enabling them, at the end, to grow indefinitely in the absence of
growth factors.45
Such genetic aberrations are signs of
genomic instability featured by almost all types of
cancer.46
We compared genomic instability in various
stages of thymomagenesis (regardless of thymoma type) measuring the
frequency of RAI, the percentage of regions showing any allelic
imbalance. The RAI values showed a trend to increase with higher stage
of disease (Figure 4)
. Stage I tumors displayed mean RAI frequency of
4.1% with SD of 4.2% versus stage IV thymomas with RAI
values of 15.2 ± 10% (Mann-Whitney U test,
P = 0.027). The increasing genomic instability with
higher stage of disease was also manifested by broader spectrum of
detected aberrations, stage I cases showing just seven various
aberrations, in contrast, stage III already 19. Comparing the RAI
values of different thymoma types, type A tumors (considered to be the
most benign of the thymomas) showed the lowest RAI level with mean of
4.5% and SD of 3.6%; on the contrary, type B3 thymomas revealed RAI
values of 14.5 ± 12%. The RAI frequency difference between the
former and latter proved to be statistically significant (Mann-Whitney
U test, P = 0.021). However, the former were
from 75% stage I tumors, the latter mixed stages II and III (33%
stage II thymomas, 47% stage III; Table 2
). It thus still has to be
investigated (using appropriately matched tumors) if this RAI
difference is because of the fundamentally different biological
behavior associated with a particular thymoma type or to the fact that
type A thymomas present mostly as stage I tumors and rarely progress
beyond that stage.
In contrast to the abundance of LOH, considered to be a feature of karyotypic instability, only six genotypes showed microsatellite instability. Peculiarly, all MSI events occurred in just one thymoma. However, this tumor also showed only low-level MSI with 12.5% MSI-positive microsatellites. It did not display >30 to 40% of MSI-positive repeats typical for hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer, in which MSI plays a significant role in the pathogenesis. Immunostains for the mismatch repair gene products hMSH2 and hMLH1 confirmed the presence of both proteins in the tumor. MSI in this case is thus not because of the deficiency of these mismatch repair proteins. The widespread genomic alterations in the form of LOHs and amplifications of genetic material and the low frequency of MSI detected in this study are rather substantial evidence for the mutator pathway having only a minor role in the pathogenesis of thymoma. A small fraction of many tumor types, in addition to those of the colon, display some level of MSI.47 In most of these tumors, the instability is considerably less pronounced than that observed in hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer and it is questionable if it is because of mismatch repair gene defects.
To identify specific genetic aberrations playing a major role in
thymomagenesis, we compared the allelotypes of tumors generated in this
study according to the thymoma stage and type (Figure 3)
. The
6g23.3-25.3 LOH was present in all stages of disease; its prevalence
ranged from 25% (stage I) to 75% (stage IV) of patients. It is the
most frequent and early aberration in thymomas detected in this study.
Additional genetic abnormalities appeared already in stage I, however,
none of them occurred in more than one case. The APC abnormalities were
evident in stage III for the first time. Notably, type B3 thymomas of
stage III suffering LOH in the 5q21 region presented with somewhat
higher RAI frequency than comparable tumors of the same type and stage
displaying the 6g23.3-25.3 LOH. None of the 5q21 LOH-positive thymomas
showed a concomitant 6q23.3-25.3 aberration; these two abnormalities
seem to be mutually exclusive. These findings thus define two
pathogenetic pathways in the development of thymomas: one characterized
by the presence of the 6g23.3-25.3 LOH, the other by LOH in the APC
tumor suppressor gene locus in the region 5q21 associated with
3p22-24.2, 13q14 (RB), and 17p13.1 (p53) LOHs. Dividing the analyzed
tumors according to their WHO type, specific allelotype patterns could
be assigned to individual thymoma groups. The 6q23.3-25.3 LOH was
present in all three investigated thymoma types. In contrast, the LOH
in the APC locus was found in type B3 only. Other abnormalities present
exclusively in the types B3 and C were frequent LOH in the 13q14 and
17p13 regions, loci of the RB and p53 genes, respectively, in the
3p22-24.2 region, and less frequent LOH in the region 8q11.21-23. These
five aberrations thus define the difference between type A thymoma on
one side and types B3 and C on the other side. The difference in the
pattern of genetic aberrations suffered by individual types of thymoma
could be a reason for the different prognosis of type A as compared to
type B3 tumors. Peculiarly, approximately two-thirds of type A thymomas
present as stage I disease and only 5% of type A tumors extend into
adjacent organs (stage III). The overall survival of type A thymoma
patients approaches 100% at 5 and 10 years.11,12
In
contrast, type B3 thymoma is a malignant tumor presenting mostly at
stage III (59%) or even IV (25%) with survival rates of 80% and 40
to 54% at 5 and 10 years, respectively.8,13
There is thus
a considerable difference in the survival of thymoma patients, which
could be a result of different patterns of aberrations displayed by
these tumors.
In summary, we show that karyotypic instability plays a decisive role in the development of type A, B3, and C thymomas. We characterize some of the common genetic aberrations occurring during thymomagenesis and describe two pathogenetic pathways these tumors develop along. The first one typified by the 6q23.3-25.3 LOH and common to types A, B3, and C type thymomas, the second one characterized by the APC LOH and displayed by WHO type B3 thymomas only. We describe a set of additional clonal aberrations featured by type B3 and C thymomas (but not type A thymomas): LOH in the RB, p53 loci, 3p22-24 and 8q11.21-23 regions. We suggest that the differences between the kind of genetic aberrations seen in type A thymoma on one side and types B3 and C thymoma on the other side might be mirrored in the differences in biological behavior displayed by these tumors. Type A thymomas being known as tumors with benign prognosis, types B3 and C thymic epithelial tumors displaying more aggressive behavior with accordingly shorter survival rates.
| Footnotes |
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Supported by a Visiting Scientist Award (no. 97833011 to R. Z.) from the Chinese Scholarship Council.
Accepted for publication August 8, 2001.
| References |
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