Introduction
Mast cells (MCs) are versatile; they can have a neoplastic behavior or, more frequently, become activated and have an active participation in different pathologies. Clonal proliferations are frequently associated with genetic mutations such as gain-of-function D816V. In this context, we can find cutaneous and systemic mastocytosis and clonal/monoclonal mast cell activation disorders or syndromes. MCs can undergo activation secondary to allergic, paraneoplastic, and inflammatory diseases1.
One field of research is the participation of MCs in central nervous system (CNS) neoplasms. The clinical manifestations and the brain tumor progression in a patient depend on the interaction between neoplastic cells and brain tissue, in a specific microenvironment2. In this microenvironment, the immune system plays an important role, as well as mechanical, biochemical and molecular factors3. MCs seem to modulate the behavior of tumor cells and tumor microenvironment (TME). Tumor-associated MCs have been found to be a favorable prognostic factor in some malignant neoplasms such as diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, esophageal adenocarcinoma, and ovarian cancer, but have poor or mixed prognosis in lung, gastric and breast cancers, and in melanoma4.
The participation of MCs is complex. On one hand, they release proinflammatory mediators contained in their granules in response to pathological events, which allows other immune system cells to be activated and many of them cross the blood–brain barrier (BBB) to exert their action. However, MCs also produce growth and angiogenic factors that may play an important role in the genesis and the growth of tumors5.
Therefore, the present work seeks to know the relationship that MCs have with different CNS tumors through a comparative immunohistochemical study on the presence, number, and location of these cells. This information is important to understand the behavior of MCs in different brain neoplasms and identify possible therapeutic strategies.
Methods
Type of study
It was a retrospective and comparative study, where biopsies of human brain tumors were analyzed.
Ethical considerations
The protocol was approved by the Ethics and Research Committees of the Faculty of Medicine, Veracruz, of the Universidad Veracruzana (2021-47). It was a retrospective study, in which personal data of the participants were not handled; informed consent was not considered necessary for this study. Patient consent was not required in accordance with local and national guidelines. The research was conducted ethically in accordance with the World Medical Association Declaration of Helsinki.
Sample
Twenty-nine recent cases (n = 29) of brain tumors were selected at convenience from the pathology department of a referral hospital in Mexico. Of the total population, 18 were men and 11 women, with an age range of ~ 1-65 years. Clinical records were reviewed. The types of tumors analyzed are shown in table 1 and included grades I-IV neoplasms (the WHO classification)6.
ID | Sex | Age (years) | Histopathological diagnosis/Grade (WHO) | Location |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | F | 18 | Pilocytic astrocytoma (I) | Hypothalamic region |
2 | M | 12 | Pilocytic astrocytoma (I) | Cerebellar hemisphere |
3 | F | 5 | Pilocytic astrocytoma (I) | Cerebellar hemisphere |
4 | F | 15 | Pilocytic astrocytoma (I) | Cerebelar vermis |
5 | M | 9 | Pilocytic astrocytoma (I) | Cerebellar hemisphere |
6 | F | 33 | Ependymoma (II) | Fourth ventricle |
7 | M | 13 | Ependymoma (II) | Fourth ventricle |
8 | M | 35 | Ependymoma (II) | Fourth ventricle |
9 | F | 10 | Ependymoma (II) | Fourth ventricle |
10 | M | 50 | Glioblastoma (IV) | Right temporal, parietal, and occipital lobes |
11 | M | 37 | Glioblastoma (IV) | Left frontal and parietal lobes |
12 | F | 5 | Glioblastoma (IV) | Left frontal and parietal lobes |
13 | F | 29 | Glioblastoma (IV) | Right frontal lobe |
14 | F | 68 | Glioblastoma (IV) | Right insula |
15 | F | 2 | Medulloblastoma (IV) | Cerebelar vermis |
16 | M | 3 | Medulloblastoma (IV) | Cerebelar vermis |
17 | M | 30 | Medulloblastoma (IV) | Right cerbellar hemisphere |
18 | M | 0.75 | Medulloblastoma (IV) | Cerebelar vermis |
19 | M | 26 | Medulloblastoma (IV) | Right cerbellar hemisphere |
20 | F | 62 | Meningioma (I) | Right tentorium |
21 | M | 28 | Meningioma (I) | Right frontal lobe |
22 | M | 28 | Meningioma (I) | Right frontal lobe |
23 | M | 52 | Meningioma (I) | Sphenoid wing |
24 | F | 48 | Meningioma (I) | Cerebellar pontine angle |
25 | M | 5 | Inmature teratoma (II) | Pineal region |
26 | M | 5 | Inmature teratoma (II) | Pineal region |
27 | M | 6 | Mature teratoma | Suprasellar region |
28 | M | 7 | Mature teratoma | Pineal region |
29 | M | 7 | Mature teratoma | Pineal región |
M: male, F: female.
Technique
The slides of the selected cases were reviewed and the histological diagnosis was corroborated. Paraffin blocks were obtained. They were sectioned and the slides were stained for hematoxylin and eosin, and immunohistochemistry for tryptase (Anti-Mast Cell Tryptase Monoclonal Antibody, unconjugated, clone 10D11, Leica Biosystems®) in an automated process using Leica Bond-III® equipment.
The slides were examined under a light microscope. The number of MCs was counted in triplicate, at 400-fold magnification; the location of these cells (in tumor cells, in the tumor stroma, perivascular, in leptomeninges, in specific tissue structures or components) was also analyzed.
Statistical analysis
Descriptive statistics with means and standard deviation were used. To compare the number of MCs between the different groups of neoplasms (Pilocytic astrocytoma, ependymoma, glioblastoma, medulloblastoma, meningioma, mature teratoma, and immature teratoma), the non-parametric Mann–Whitney test was used and p < 0.05 was considered significant. Statistical analysis was performed with IBM® SPSS® Statistics V. 26 software.
Results
The demographic data of the patients and the characteristics of the neoplasms, including type, histological grade, and location are shown in table 1.
Pilocytic astrocytomas
The average age of the patients was 11.8 years. With the exception of the hypothalamic region, all were located in the cerebellum. None of the tumors showed MCs infiltrate.
Ependymoma
The average age of the patients was 22.7 years. All were infratentorial, in relation to the IV ventricle. On average, there were 8.1 MC/10 high power fields (HPF), in a perivascular location, as shown in figure 1A.
Glioblastoma (adult-type diffuse glioma-wild type)
The average age of the patients was 37.8 years. All tumors were supratentorial. There were, on average, 3.4 MCs/10 HPF, and they were observed in both, perivascular space and the tumor stroma.
Medulloblastoma NOS
The average age of the patients was 12.3 years. There were three tumors in the vermis, and two in the cerebellar hemispheres. In these tumors, 5.2 MCs/HPF were quantified. MCs were observed both, in the perivascular space and in the tumor stroma (Fig. 1B).
Meningioma
The average age of the patients was 43.6 years. There were two right frontal tumors, one was dependent on the tentorium, one on the sphenoid wing, and the other on the cerebellar-pontine angle. Meningiomas showed 11.40 MCs/HPF, and they were observed predominantly in the meningeal lining that covered the tumor (Fig. 1C).
Immature teratoma
The average age of the patients was 5 years. Both were pineal region tumors, and three MCs/HPF were quantified. MCs were observed predominantly in the tumoral stroma.
Mature teratoma
The average age of the patients was 6.6 years. Two were pineal region tumors, and one had suprasellar location. In these neoplasms, 65 MCs/HPF were quantified, and associated predominantly, with the squa-mous epithelium while were very scarce in other tissues of the tumor (Fig. 1D).
Statistical analysis
Results are shown in table 2.
Tumor | Means | SD | Tumor | Means | SD | Mann–Whitney | p |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pylocitic astrocytoma | 0.00 | 0.00 | Ependymoma | 8.13 | 5.98 | 0.00 | 0.007 |
Glioblastoma | 3.40 | 2.88 | 0.00 | 0.005 | |||
Medulloblastoma | 5.20 | 4.66 | 2.50 | 0.019 | |||
Meningioma | 11.40 | 17.29 | 0.00 | 0.005 | |||
Mature teratoma | 65.00 | 42.51 | 0.00 | 0.010 | |||
Inmature teratoma | 3.00 | 1.41 | 0.00 | 0.016 | |||
Ependymoma | 8.13 | 5.98 | Glioblastoma | 3.40 | 2.88 | 3.5 | 0.108 |
Medulloblastoma | 5.20 | 4.66 | 6.5 | 0.389 | |||
Meningioma | 11.40 | 17.29 | 9.5 | 0.902 | |||
Mature teratoma | 65.00 | 42.51 | 0 | 0.034 | |||
Inmature teratoma | 3.00 | 1.41 | 2 | 0.355 | |||
Glioblastoma | 3.40 | 2.88 | Medulloblastoma | 5.20 | 4.66 | 10.50 | 0.671 |
Meningioma | 11.40 | 17.29 | 7.00 | 0.243 | |||
Mature teratoma | 65.00 | 42.51 | 0.00 | 0.024 | |||
Inmature teratoma | 3.00 | 1.41 | 4.50 | 0.844 | |||
Medullo-blastoma | 5.20 | 4.66 | Meningioma | 11.40 | 17.29 | 10.5 | 0.674 |
Mature teratoma | 65.00 | 42.51 | 0 | 0.025 | |||
Inmature teratoma | 3.00 | 1.41 | 4 | 0.699 | |||
Meningioma | 11.40 | 17.29 | Mature teratoma | 65.00 | 42.51 | 1.00 | 0.050 |
Inmature teratoma | 3.00 | 1.41 | 4.00 | 0.688 | |||
Mature teratoma | 65.00 | 42.51 | Inmature teratoma | 3.00 | 1.41 | 0.00 | 0.083 |
SD: Standard deviation
Discussion
Most of the information available regarding MCs in neoplasms of the CNS is related to meningiomas. They have been observed in a perivascular arrangement in 90% of high-grade meningiomas and have been associated with brain edema7. MCs have cytoplasmic granules and secrete chemokines and cytokines that can disrupt the BBB; also, these cells have angiogenic mediators that may contribute to tumor development7. Knowing the cells of the immune system, which participate in the TME of neoplasms, are the beginning for molecular studies that allow to understand the interaction mechanisms and to contribute to the discovery of prognostic factors and new therapeutic targets7. In fact, a tumor stroma rich in B lymphocytes and MCs has recently been described in the G4 molecular subgroup of medulloblastomas, which may be a marker of better prognosis8.
Although there are studies of individual tumors (meningiomas, medulloblastomas, etc.), there are no comparative studies between different types of neoplasms in the CNS; this information is useful because it allows to show other types of relationships between MCs and neoplastic cells. For example, the maximum number of MCs/10 HPF was observed in relation to the mature squamous epithelial component of the teratomas. Mature teratoma seems to be a study model for MCs tissue affinity. It was evident the tropism of these cells for the stratified squamous epithelium, despite the fact that other mature tissues were available. MCs produce many trophic factors, but it is well known that histamine induces epithelial cell proliferation9. MCs also produce heparin that increases epithelial proliferation in a dose-dependent manner and inhibits the growth of associated mesenchyme10. Furthermore, epidermal secretion of CCL2 and CCL5 chemokines attracts MCs10.
In meningiomas, MCs were located predominantly in the leptomeninges. The perivascular zones were the seat of MCs in ependymomas, medulloblastomas, and glioblastomas; these past two cases also showed the presence of MCs in the intratumoral stroma. However, the circumscribed glioma, pilocytic astrocytomas, did not show MCs.
Location of MCs in the analyzed tumors was not related to a histologically evident inflammatory process. Therefore, why is there a different number and distribution of MCs in different CNS tumors? MCs are able to migrate from blood to brain parenchyma and in pathological conditions may disrupt BBB and induce basal lamina degradation, releasing TNF-a, and matrix metalloproteinases MMP-2 and MMP-911. In vitro has been demonstrated that MCs infiltrate gliomas in response to different tumor signals, including IL-6, initiating a dialogue between neoplastic and MCs12. TME is important in the interaction and includes tumor and non- tumor resident cells. In the case of glioblastoma and medulloblastoma, both, grade IV tumors, MCs were observed not only perivascularly, but also in the tumor stroma. Tumor-associated MCs that infiltrate solid tumors are controversial, because depending of the tumor, may have pro-tumoral (promoting angiogenesis, fibrosis, metastasis, and lymph angiogenesis) or antitumoral behavior13. Glioblastoma cells can recruit other cells of the host organism to promote their growth. Glioblastoma induces immune-depressive effects, especially through two transcription factors, SRY-box transcription factor 2 (Sox2), and octamer-binding transcription factor 4 (Oct 4), that when activated promote suppression of innate and adaptative immune responses, and maintain glioma cell stemness and tumor-propagating activity14. In the case of MCs, it is possible that their presence contributes to the disruption of the BBB and the accompanying edema observed in glioblastoma, but it is also possible that the tumor manipulates these cells to promote angiogenesis through production by MCs of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). Production of IL-6 by the tumor cells induces VEGF production by MCs, in vitro and, at the same time, induces survival of MCs14. However, in spite that, pilocytic astrocytomas are vascularized neoplasms, do not show MCs. This neoplasm is grade I-tumor with a low growth rate; more research is needed in this field14.
In the case of medulloblastoma (MB), in patients with Group 4 tumors, tumor-infiltrating B-cells (TIL-Bs) enrichment has been described. Patients with a high-level of TIL-Bs had better 5-years survival. Interestingly, MCs in Group 4 MB correlated positively with TIL-Bs8. Group 4 medulloblastomas account for 35% of MBs and are characterized by amplification of the MYCN proto-oncogene, isochromosome 17q, and frequently, duplication of gene SNCAIP (synuclein alpha interacting protein)15. In an angiogenesis study in MB, distribution of toll-like receptor 2 (TLR2), and receptor for advanced glycosylation end-product (RAGE), as well as the location of MCs were studied. MCs were observed in the perivascular space of large brain and meningeal vessels at the border of tumor, associated with RAGE+ receptors, while TLR2 was positive in angiogenesis at necrotic areas16. A targeted study is required to investigate the involvement of MCs in the different MB subgroups.
Paul Ehrlich described MCs, in 1878; they have a wide distribution and are strategically located at the interface between the organism and the environment (skin, gastrointestinal tract, and respiratory mucosa) and participate in type I hypersensitivity reactions. The immature progenitor cells (CD34+ and CD117+) migrate from bone marrow to peripheral tissues where they finally mature17. At the CNS, MCs are normally found in the brain side of the BBB and in the leptomeninges18. Under physiological conditions, their number is scarce; however, they maintain constant communication with neurons, astrocytes, microglia, and endothelial cells.
In the communication between neurons and MCs, the formation of synaptic-like structures favored by adhesion molecules such as N-cadherin or synaptic cell adhesion molecule (SynCAM) has been described19. Serotonin produced by MCs contributes to neurogenesis and to the behavioral and physiological function of the hippocampus. Serotonin is a trophic factor synthesized by both, MCs, and neurons20. MCs also interact with astrocytes and microglia. It has been shown that microglia constitutively expresses the four histamine receptors (H1R, H2R, H3R, and H4R) and there is a selective upregulation of receptors H1R and H4R in response to histamine21.
On the other hand, astrocytes bear histamine receptors H1R and H2R and coincide with MCs in the perivascular space, in the thalamus, hypothalamus and in the pineal region22. Recognition between these two cells takes place through the interaction of CD40-CD40 ligand23. The immune microenvironment of meningiomas includes macrophages, T-cells, and MCs. Expression of tryptase was observed in 32% of low-grade meningiomas and 86% of high-grade meningiomas, close to blood vessels24. Both, meningiomas and MCs can secrete VEGF; intracranial meningiomas have been associated with brain edema in 50-66% of cases. It seems to be an association of MCs with perivascular edema and with disruption of the BBB, especially in secretory meningiomas characterized by infiltration by many of MCs25. In our study, all cases of meningioma (the WHO I) showed MCs, predominantly in the meningeal lining that covered the tumor and also, in perivascular distribution.
We must consider that the groups of tumors analyzed were small; however, the difference in the number of cells observed in pilocytic astrocytomas and mature teratomas was evident. If larger groups are compared, statistically significant differences can probably be observed even between some subtypes of the same tumor type.
Conclusions
This work demonstrated that MCs involvement varies in different tumors; from neoplasms with absent MCs, such as pilocytic astrocytomas, to tumors with abundant MCs with special trophism toward the stratified squamous epithelium component in mature teratomas. In this spectrum, MCs were found in smaller numbers in the other tumors studied, with spatial distribution in perivascular ependymomas and in the leptomeningeal lining in meningiomas. It is necessary to study the mechanisms of interaction of these cells in the different TMEs, especially to identify possible therapeutic targets and prognostic factors.