The Role of the Extracellular Space in Biology of Glial Brain Tumors
Zámečník J., Vargová L.*, Kodet R., Syková E.*
Ústav patologie a molekulární medicíny 2. LF UK a FN v Motole, Praha*Ústav neurověd, Centrum buněčné terapie a tkáňových náhrad, 2. LF UK, Ústav experimentální medicíny AV ČR, Praha |
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Summary:
The size, geometry and composition of the extracellular space (ECS) play an important role in
influencing the biological behavior of primary brain tumors. Experiments employing the realtime
TMA iontophoretic method to determine the size and geometry of the ECS, by monitoring
the diffusion of TMA ions in the ECS, revealed a dramatic increase in ECS size in brain neoplasms
when compared with that of unaffected brain cortex. Further, the increase of ECS volume in
tumors was shown to correlate with increasing proliferative activity and increasing cellularity of
astrocytomas. The increase in ECS size was surprisingly accompanied by a significant increase
in diffusion barriers, slowing the diffusion of molecules in the ECS of tumors. In low-grade
tumors, diffusion is hindered by the presence of a dense net of tumor cell processes. In high-grade
gliomas, in which the cellular processes are shortened with reduced branching, the increase in
diffusion barriers is caused by the overproduction of specific components of the extracellular
matrix (ECM) by the tumor cells, mainly tenascin. The ECM glycoproteins produced represent
a substrate for the subsequent adhesion and migration of tumor cells through the enlarged ECS.
However, they might also critically reduce the diffusion of therapeutics into the tumor. The
presence of tenascin in the ECS of a neoplasm correlates significantly with the increased
malignancy of the tumor and a poor clinical outcome of the disease, thus making the
immunohistochemical detection of tenascin diagnostically useful as a prognostic marker and
a marker of aggressive biological behavior of tumors
Key words:
gliomas – extracellular space – extracellular matrix – tenascin
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