pubmed:abstractText |
The value of neuron specific enolase (NSE) immunoreactivity as a marker for small cell lung cancer (SLC) has been assessed using a monoclonal antibody (MCAB) against NSE, MCAB specificity was confirmed using purified enolase isoenzymes, sections of human brain, a panel of lung tumours, neuroendocrine and non-neuroendocrine tumours and normal tissues. Using this MCAB in radioimmunoassay and immunohistochemistry, NSE immunoreactivity was detected in all SCLC material examined. However, considerable reactivity was also observed in a number of non-small cell lung cancer cell lines and tumour biopsy specimens. Furthermore, intratumoral heterogeneity with respect to NSE immunostaining was observed in several cases. Factors which may underlie such intratumoral phenotypic diversity were assessed using flow cytometry together with MCABs directed against both NSE and non-neuronal enolase. Such studies revealed that enolase expression in cells which were no longer actively proliferating differed markedly from that of cells in exponential growth. Furthermore, cells grown under conditions of increasing hypoxia exhibited increased enolase expression relative to those grown under oxygenated conditions. It is concluded from these studies that NSE immunoreactivity per se is an unreliable marker for the SCLC phenotype.
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