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  • Title: Midline brain tumors in MSV-SV 40-transgenic mice originate from the pineal organ.
    Author: Götz W, Theuring F, Schachenmayr W, Korf HW.
    Journal: Acta Neuropathol; 1992; 83(3):308-14. PubMed ID: 1373025.
    Abstract:
    Adult transgenic mice expressing the large T-antigen of the Simian virus 40 (SV 40) under the control of the Moloney murine sarcoma virus (MSV) enhancer and the SV 40 promoter develop inheritable uniform midline brain neoplasms showing features of primitive neuroectodermal tumors. The origin and histogenesis of these tumors were investigated in the present study. The brain and pineal organ of fetal and young transgenic mice less than 3 months old displayed normal macroscopic and microscopic features. In 3.5-month-old animals, the pineal organ was considerably enlarged due to hyperplasia, finally leading to tumor formation. Immunocytochemical demonstration of large T-antigen showed that this oncoprotein was already expressed in the nuclei of certain cells in the pineal organ of fetuses (16 and 18 days old) and newborn animals, but was absent from all other parts of the brain. The immunocytochemical demonstration of S-antigen (arrestin), a highly characteristic marker for pinealocytes, was used for further characterization of the large T-antigen-immunoreactive cells. The fetal pineal organ did not contain immunoreactive S-antigen. This first occurred in certain pinealocytes of newborn mice. Double immunostaining revealed that in newborn and older transgenic mice the immunoreactive large T-antigen was exclusively found in nuclei of cells containing S-antigen immunoreaction in their cytoplasm. Thus, transformed pinealocytes appear as stem cells of the experimental tumors. The results of this study suggest that primitive neuroectodermal tumors and the normal tissue from which they originate share certain molecular and immunocytochemical features.
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