Increased bcl-2 protein levels in prostatic adenocarcinomas are not associated with rearrangements in the 2.8 kb major breakpoint region or with p53 protein accumulation

Autor: B V, Kallakury, J, Figge, B, Leibovich, J, Hwang, M, Rifkin, R, Kaufman, H L, Figge, T, Nazeer, J S, Ross
Rok vydání: 1996
Předmět:
Zdroj: Modern pathology : an official journal of the United States and Canadian Academy of Pathology, Inc. 9(1)
ISSN: 0893-3952
Popis: bcl-2, an inhibitor of programmed cell death (apoptosis), is present in high levels in a subset of prostatic adenocarcinomas. In this study, 42 prostatic adenocarcinomas were analyzed to determine whether increased bcl-2 levels are associated with rearrangements in the 2.8-kb major breakpoint region, an association known to occur in certain follicular lymphomas featuring a t(14:18) translocation. Immunostaining for bcl-2 and p53 proteins was performed on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tumor specimens using murine anti-human bcl-2 and p53 monoclonal antibodies in all 42 cases. Genomic DNA from paired frozen samples of each tumor was subjected to digestion with HindIII and EcoRI and the products analyzed on a Southern blot with a 2.8-kb-digoxigenin-labeled major breakpoint region probe. Comparisons between groups were evaluated with the Fisher exact test. Diffuse, strong cytoplasmic immunoreactivity for bcl-2 was present in the epithelial cells of tumor glands in 16 of 42 cases (38%), including 8 of 19 low grade (Gleason score 6 and below) and 8 of 23 high grade (Gleason score 7 and above) prostatic adenocarcinoma. Southern blotting demonstrated a normal 2.8-kb germline DNA fragment in every case, with no evidence of rearrangement. Nuclear p53 staining was present in 10 of 24 high grade and 0 of 18 low grade tumors (P0.001). Only four cases exhibited positivity for both bcl-2 and p53, and there was no association of bcl-2 positivity with co-expression of the p53 protein (P = 0.58). We conclude that aberrations in the function of either bcl-2 or p53 could possibly modify the apoptotic pathway resulting in the extended survival of tumor cells. Also, increased bcl-2 levels in prostatic adenocarcinomas occur in the absence of detectable rearrangements in the major breakpoint region.
Databáze: OpenAIRE