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Anticancer Research

Fas (APO-1, CD95) receptor expression and new options for immunotherapy in childhood medulloblastomas.

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B Bodey
B Bodey
S E Siegel
H E Kaiser

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Abstrakcyjny

Central nervous system (CNS) tumors are the most common solid neoplasms in children. Medulloblastomas (MEDs) resemble embryonic neuroectodermal stem cells and their immature, uncommitted neuronal and glial progeny. Apoptosis is a basic physiological process wherein the cell initiates a sequence of events culminating in the fragmentation of its DNA, nuclear collapse, and finally, disintegration of the cell into small, membrane-bound apoptotic bodies. Expression of Fas (APO-1, CD95) receptor (FasR) and programmed or active cell death (PCD) was studied in childhood MEDs with varying stages of malignancy, and cell differentiation features. The majority of neoplastically transformed, neuroectodermal in origin cells, particularly in MEDs, express FasR, whereas normal cells in the CNS do not. FasR is a transmembrane glycoprotein, which belongs to the nerve growth factor/tumor necrosis factor (NGF/TNF) receptor superfamily. Apoptosis within childhood PNETs/MEDs is triggered by the binding of FasR to its natural ligand (FasL) or by cross-linking with anti-section i FasR antibodies. The resence of FasL has also been detected in childhood glial tumors. Therefore, a spontaneous, cellular immunophenotype (IP) regulatory, intratumoral apoptotic cell death (autocrine suicide) is possible in childhood brain tumors during neoplastic growth and progression. During our systematic immunocytochemical screening, we employed formalin fixed, paraffin-wax embedded tissue sections, as well as frozen sections of 34 primary human childhood PNETs/MEDs. The use of a sensitive, indirect, six step immunoperoxidase or alkaline phosphatase conjugated streptavidin-biotin antigen detection technique, modified by us, provided excellent immunocyto-chemical results. A systematic observation of the presence of apoptosis related markers (especially FasR) and cells in PCD was carried out. A strong expression (intensity of staining: "A"-the highest possible; number of stained neoplastic cells: +3 to +4, between 50% to 90%) of FasR, was detected employing 4 microns thick, formalin fixed, paraffin-wax embedded tissue slides. The panel of normal tissues employed as positive and negative tissue controls demonstrated presence of FasR in the prenatal thymus, mature tonsils and colon epithelium. Certainly, the coexpression of FasR, FasL, and other PCD-related proteins have also been reported in other human malignancies: breast cancer, colorectal carcinomas, large granular lymphocytic leukemia of T or NK cell origin, melanomas, lung, prostate, pancreas, and hepatocellular carcinomas. The coexpression of both FasR and FasL on several neoplastic cell types may represent an effective mechanism for tumor escape of the cellular immunological response of the host. It has been well established that brain tumors and melanomas produce their autocrine FasL, and even become capable of switching their signal transduction from the PCD pathway to a tumor growth, proliferative pathway. It seems that the therapeutical use of FasR-FasL (main apoptotic pathway) represents a new and exciting immunotherapeutical possibility in the treatment of primary childhood neuroectodermal tumors.

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