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Differential expression of osteopontin and bone sialoprotein in bone metastasis of breast and prostate carcinoma
Authors:Gabriele Carlinfante  Daphne Vassiliou  Olle Svensson  Mikael Wendel  Dick Heinegård  Göran Andersson
Affiliation:(1) Division of Pathology/ IMPI, Karolinska Institute, and Clinical Research Centre, Huddinge University Hospital, Huddinge, Sweden;(2) Present address: Division of Pathology, Istituti Ospitalieridi Cremona, Cremona, Italy;(3) Division of Pathology/ IMPI, Karolinska Institute, and Clinical Research Centre, Huddinge University Hospital, Huddinge, Sweden;(4) Present address: Division of Orthopaedics, Umeá University, Umeá, Sweden;(5) The Centre of Oral Biology, Novum Research Centre, Karolinska Institute, Huddinge, Sweden;(6) Department of Cell- and Molecular Biology, Lund University, Lund, Sweden
Abstract:Breast and prostate cancer often metastasise to the skeleton. Interestingly, the histopathological characteristics of the bone lesions that arise from these two cancer types differ. Breast tumours give rise to metastases in the skeleton with a mixed lytic/sclerotic pattern, whereas a predominantly sclerotic pattern is seen in metastases from prostate tumours. Osteopontin (OPN) and bone sialoprotein (BSP) are bone matrix proteins that have been implicated in the selective affinity of cancer cells for bone. In the present study, 21 patient cases with skeletal metastasis and their respective primary tumours (12 with breast cancer, 9 with prostate cancer) were investigated by immunohistochemistry in order to assess the level of OPN and BSP. Moderate to strong OPN expression was found in 42% of all breast tumours and in 56% of all prostate tumours. Significantly more breast cancer bone metastases exhibited high OPN expression, 83%, as compared with prostate tumour bone metastases, 11% (P=0.0019). In contrast, moderate to strong BSP expression was found in 33% of breast tumours and in 89% of prostate tumours. In the bone lesions, only 33% of breast tumour metastases showed moderate/strong BSP expression compared to 100% of prostate tumour metastases (P=0.0046). This divergent pattern of OPN/BSP expression could be an important determinant for the different characteristics of these two types of bone metastasis, i.e., lytic vs. sclerotic, consistent with the proposed role of OPN in differentiation and activation of osteoclasts and of BSP as a stimulator of bone mineralisation. This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.
Keywords:bone metastasis  bone sialoprotein  osteopontin
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