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AIM To evaluate the immunohistochemical(IHC) expression of five biomarkers, commonly involved in epithelial mesenchymal/mesenchymal epithelial transition(EMT/MET), in gastrointestinal stromal tumors(GISTs). METHODS In 80 consecutive GISTs the IHC examinations were performed using the EMT-related antibodies E-cadherin,N-cadherin, SLUG, V-set and immunoglobulin domain containing 1(VSIG1) and CD44. RESULTS The positivity rate was 88.75% for SLUG, 83.75% for VSIG1, 36.25% for CD44 and 10% for N-cadherin. No correlation was noted between the examined markers and clinicopathological parameters. Nuclear positivity for SLUG and VSIG1 was observed in all cases with distant metastasis. The extra-gastrointestinal stromal tumors(e-GISTs) expressed nuclear positivity for VSIG1 and SLUG, with infrequent positivity for N-cadherin and CD44. The low overall survival was mainly dependent on VSIG1 negativity(P = 0.01) and nuclear positivity for SLUG and/or CD44. CONCLUSION GIST aggressivity may be induced by nuclear upregulation of SLUG and loss or cytoplasm-to-nuclear translocation of VSIG1. SLUG and VSIG1 may act as activated nuclear transcription factors. The CD44, but not N-cadherin, might also have an independent prognostic value in these tumors. The role of the EMT/MET-related transcription factors in the evolution of GISTs, should be revisited with a larger dataset. This is the first study exploring the IHC pattern of VSIG1 in GISTs.
AIM To evaluate the immunohistochemical (IHC) expression of five biomarkers, commonly involved in epithelial mesenchymal / mesenchymal epithelial transition (EMT / MET), in gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs). METHODS In 80 consecutive GISTs the IHC examinations were performed using the EMT- RESULTS The positivity rate was 88.75% for SLUG, 83.75% for VSIG1, 36.25% for CD44 and 10% for N The correlation between nuclear positivity for SLUG and VSIG1 was observed in all cases with distant metastasis. The extra-gastrointestinal stromal tumors (e-GISTs) expressed nuclear positivity for VSIG1 and SLUG, with infrequent positivity for N-cadherin and CD44. The low overall survival was mainly dependent on VSIG1 negativity (P = 0.01) and nuclear positivity for SLUG and / or CD44. CONCLUSION GIST aggressivity may be induce d by nuclear upregulation of SLUG and loss or cytoplasm-to-nuclear translocation of VSIG1. SLUG and VSIG1 may act as activated nuclear transcription factors. The CD44, but not N-cadherin, might also have an independent prognostic value in these tumors. role of the EMT / MET-related transcription factors in the evolution of GISTs, should be revisited with a larger dataset. This is the first study exploring the IHC pattern of VSIG1 in GISTs.