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ACTN4 gene amplification and actinin-4 protein overexpression drive tumour development and histological progression in a high-grade subset of ovarian clear-cell adenocarcinomas.

Authors :
Yamamoto, Sohei
Tsuda, Hitoshi
Honda, Kazufumi
Takano, Masashi
Tamai, Seiichi
Imoto, Issei
Inazawa, Johji
Yamada, Tesshi
Matsubara, Osamu
Source :
Histopathology; Jun2012, Vol. 60 Issue 7, p1073-1083, 11p, 3 Color Photographs, 2 Charts, 1 Graph
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Yamamoto S, Tsuda H, Honda K, Takano M, Tamai S, Imoto I, Inazawa J, Yamada T & Matsubara O (2012) Histopathology 60,1073-1083 ACTN4 gene amplification and actinin-4 protein overexpression drive tumour development and histological progression in a high-grade subset of ovarian clear-cell adenocarcinomas Aims: Actinin-4, encoded by the ACTN4 gene located on chromosome 19q13.2, enhances cell motility by bundling the actin cytoskeleton. We assessed how ACTN4/actinin-4 alterations contribute to the tumorigenesis of ovarian clear-cell adenocarcinomas (CCAs). Methods and results: Fluorescence in-situ hybridization analysis demonstrated that ACTN4 amplification (≥4 ACTN4 copies in ≥40% of cells) occurred in 27 (33%) of 81 CCAs and genomic gains of ACTN4 were associated strongly with immunohistochemical actinin-4 overexpression, poorly differentiated tumour histology and shorter patient survival (all P < 0.05). From the 27 ACTN4-amplified CCAs, 23 tumours with adjacent putative precursor lesions were selected and examined for ACTN4/actinin-4 alterations with respect to their intratumoral heterogeneity. In this selected cohort, none of the precursors lacking cytological atypia exhibited gains of ACTN4 or actinin-4 overexpression; 50% of the atypical endometrioses and 75% of the borderline CCAFs showed low-level gains of ACTN4 and actinin-4 overexpression, respectively. In 12 of 23 ACTN4-amplified CCAs, intratumoral heterogeneity for ACTN4 alterations was documented in carcinomatous components; the better differentiated carcinoma components exhibited fewer alterations than those with poorly differentiated histology. Conclusion: Accumulative genomic gains of ACTN4, causing actinin-4 protein overexpression, drive the development and progression of ovarian CCAs with high-grade histology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03090167
Volume :
60
Issue :
7
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Histopathology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
75506099
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2559.2011.04163.x