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Alternative EWS-FLI1 fusion gene and MIC2 expression in peripheral and central primitive neuroectodermal tumors.

Primitive neuroectodermal tumors (PNET) occur either in the central nervous system (CNS; central PNET, cPNET) or in the peripheral sites (peripheral PNET, pPNET). Recent molecular approaches have been defining a new concept of PNET, that is, the pPNET including Ewing's sarcoma (ES) which expresses MIC2 glycoprotein and shows the specific chimeric gene of EWS-FLI1. The expression of MIC2 and the genetic rearrangement of EWS-FLI1 are considered to be highly specific to the pPNET/ES. This study examined the expression of MIC2 and EWS-FLI1 gene by means of immunohistochemistry and reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) on various small round cell tumors originating in the CNS or non-CNS organs. All peripheral PNET tested expressed MIC2 and were positive for EWS-FLI1 (11/11). In contrast, all cPNET and other blastic CNS tumors were negative for MIC2: medulloblastoma (0/3), cerebral PNET (0/2), spinal PNET (0/2), glioblastoma (0/2), retinoblastoma (0/3), and pineoblastoma (0/2). These MIC2-negative tumors were also negative for the chimeric gene product of EWS-FLI1. Interestingly, one PNET originating in the intracranial dura mater was positive for both MIC2 and EWS-FLI1 fusion gene. The results indicate that cPNET lacks any genetic or protein markers, except for a meningeal PNET which falls into the same phenotypic spectrum of pPNET.

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