Expression of a gap junction protein, connexin43, in a large panel of human gliomas: new insights.

Cancer Med

Laboratoire Signalisation et Transports Ioniques Membranaires, University of Poitiers, ERL-CNRS 7368, 1 rue Georges Bonnet, TSA 51106, 86073, Poitiers Cedex 09, France.

Published: August 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • Understanding the precise diagnosis of brain tumors helps determine effective treatment plans, requiring a combination of histological, genetic, and molecular markers for gliomas.
  • The study focused on the expression of connexin43 (Cx43), a protein linked to glioma progression, utilizing a larger sample size of 85 tumor samples to draw new conclusions about Cx43's role as a potential marker.
  • Findings revealed that while Cx43 generally decreases in higher-grade gliomas, over 60% of glioblastomas still express it, and there is no consistent decrease from grade II to III, highlighting the importance of studying Cx43's localization and expression in various tumor types.

Article Abstract

Precise diagnosis of low and high grades of brain tumors permits determining therapeutical strategies. So far, diagnosis and prognosis of gliomas were based on histological and genetic criteria which need being completed by a panel of molecular markers. Highly distributed in brain, gap junction proteins, connexins, could be considered as markers of glioma progression as previous studies indicated that expression of a connexin type, connexin43 (Cx43), is inversely correlated to tumor grading. However, this assumption was weakened by the low number of glioma samples used. Taking advantage of tissue microarray technique, we pursued this analysis by studying in situ expression of Cx43 on 85 samples (37 grade IV, 18 grade III, 24 grade II, and 6 grades II to III). Our analysis confirmed the global diminution of Cx43 expression in glioblastomas that was observed in previous studies. However, this analysis brought new insights such as the following ones. First, the high number of samples permitted to show that more than 60% of glioblastomas still express Cx43. Second, no gradual decrease in Cx43 expression was observed between grades II and III, but Cx43 appeared to be a marker distinguishing oligodendrocytic and astrocytic grade III tumors. Third, independently from tumor grade, a Cx43 nuclear staining was detected in areas where leukocytes are present. In conclusion, our study emphasizes the importance of in situ immunohistochemical approaches by giving more precise insights in the subcellular localization of Cx43. It also emphasizes the necessity to carry out such analysis on a wide range of samples to circumvent the high glioma heterogeneity.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4971902PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cam4.730DOI Listing

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