Objective: To investigate the utility of hMena, a family of enabled/vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein (Ena/VASP), we sought to characterize the expression profile and distribution characteristics of hMena in a large panel of glioma samples and determine whether hMena expression levels might correlate with the pathological grade of glioma.
Methods: Sixty-five specimens of glioma with different pathological grades and five control brain tissues were collected. In 6 of the 21 glioblastoma patients, multi-specimens were obtained respectively from the main tumor mass, the junction zone between the tumor and the normal tissue, and adjacent brain tissue 1.5 cm away from the tumor boundary under assistance of neuronavigation system during the operation. Immunohistochemistry was used to detect the expression and distribution characteristics of hMena. hMena expression was analyzed by Western blot in 20 specimens.
Results: The hMena expression was negative in control brain tissue but positive in different grades of glioma. The expression rate of hMena was positively correlated with the increasing grade of the World Health Orgnization (WHO) classification (r(s)=0.682, P=0.000). hMena was located in cytoplasm. Positive cells only distributed around the vessels within the tumor mass in low grade glioma, while in high grade glioma, these cells were able to be detected not only in the tumor but also in the boundary zone and adjacent brain parenchyma. In the tumor mass, hMena expressed highly and diffusedly. In the junction zone, hMena positive cells formed radiolitic pattern around the vessels. In adjacent brain parenchyma, single positive cell was scattered. hMena expression was markedly elevated in Grade III and IV glioma compared with Grade II and I.
Conclusion: Our data suggested that the expression of hMena is closely related to malignant grade of glioma. hMena can label the migrating cells, and indicate the migrating path of glioma cells from the tumor to adjacent tissue along with the vascular basement membranes and tracts of white matter.
Keywords: Glioma; Immunohistochemistry; Migration; hMena.