Objective: Inhibins and activins are important regulators of the female reproductive system and have also been described to be involved in gynecologic cancer development. A new inhibin/activin subunit betaE has been identified, but only limited data on its expression in human uterine adenocarcinomas and endometrial cancer cell lines exist.
Methods: A series of 223 uterine endometrial adenocarcinomas were immunohistochemically analyzed with a specific antibody against the inhibin betaE-subunit. In addition, established endometrial cancer cell lines were analyzed for the synthesis of the inhibin betaE subunit by immunofluorescence and RT-PCR analysis.
Results: In this analysis, the inhibin betaE staining intensity was associated with histological grading along with a significant decrease in cases with ovarian invasion. However, inhibin-betaE did not affect patient survival nor did it constitute an independent prognostic parameter in endometrial adenocarcinoma patients. Additionally, the inhibin/activin betaE-subunit was found to be expressed in the human endometrial carcinoma cell lines HEC1a, HEC1b, Ishikawa, and RL95-2, although the level of expression was found to be highly differing among the cancer cell lines tested.
Conclusion: The isolated analysis of the inhibin betaE subunit might be of minor prognostic value in identifying high-risk patients. However, its differential expression in cancer of different histological differentiation and ovarian metastasis suggests a putative but yet undefined role in endometrial carcinogenesis. Whether this novel and not well studied inhibin subunit has a substantial function in the pathogenesis and malignant transformation of human endometrium is still under investigation.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ygyno.2011.03.019 | DOI Listing |
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