Litcius/Paper detail

KIT Somatic Mutations and Immunohistochemical Expression in Canine Oral Melanoma

Ginevra Brocca, Beatrice Poncina, Alessandro Sammarco, Laura Cavicchioli, Massimo Castagnaro

2020Animals11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Canine oral melanoma (COM) is an aggressive neoplasm with a low response to therapies, sharing similarities with human mucosal melanomas. In the latter, significant alterations of the proto-oncogene KIT have been shown, while in COMs only its exon 11 has been adequately investigated. In this study, 14 formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded COMs were selected considering the following inclusion criteria: unequivocal diagnosis, presence of healthy tissue, and a known amplification status of the gene KIT (seven samples affected and seven non-affected by amplification). The DNA was extracted and KIT target exons 13, 17, and 18 were amplified by PCR and sequenced. Immunohistochemistry (IHC) for KIT and Ki67 was performed, and a quantitative index was calculated for each protein. PCR amplification and sequencing was successful in 97.62% of cases, and no single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) was detected in any of the exons examined, similarly to exon 11 in other studies. The immunolabeling of KIT was positive in 84.6% of the samples with a mean value of 3.1 cells in positive cases, yet there was no correlation with aberration status. Our findings confirm the hypothesis that SNPs are not a frequent event in KIT activation in COMs, with the pathway activation relying mainly on amplification.

Topics & Concepts

ExonImmunohistochemistryBiologyMolecular biologySNPSingle-nucleotide polymorphismGene duplicationMelanomaPathologyGeneCancer researchGeneticsGenotypeMedicineImmunologyVeterinary Oncology ResearchMast cells and histamineCutaneous Melanoma Detection and Management