Nasopharyngeal carcinoma with non-squamous phenotype may be a variant of nasopharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma after inhibition of EGFR/PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway

Histol Histopathol. 2023 Nov 8:18673. doi: 10.14670/HH-18-673. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTNasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) is a cancerous tumor that develops in the nasopharynx epithelium and typically has squamous differentiation. The squamous phenotype is evident in immunohistochemistry, with diffuse nuclear positivity for p63 and p40. Nonetheless, a few NPCs have been identified by clinicopathological diagnosis that do not exhibit the squamous phenotype; these NPCs are currently referred to as non-squamous immunophenotype nasopharyngeal carcinomas (NSNPCs). In a previous work, we have revealed similarities between the histological appearance, etiology, and gene alterations of NSNPC and conventional NPC. According to ultrastructural findings, NSNPC still falls under the category of non-keratinized squamous cell carcinoma that is undifferentiated. NSNPC has an excellent prognosis and a low level of malignancy, according to a retrospective investigation. Based on prior research, we investigated the molecular mechanism of NSNPC not expressing the squamous phenotype and its biological behavior. IHC was used to determine the expression of EGFR, PI3K, AKT, p-AKT, mTOR, p-mTOR, Notch, STAT3 and p-STAT3 in a total of 20 NSNPC tissue samples and 20 classic NPC tissue samples. We obtained human NPC cell lines (CNE-2,5-8F) and used EGFR overexpression plasmid and shRNAs to transfect them. To find out whether mRNA and proteins were expressed in the cells, we used Western blotting and ...
Source: Histology and Histopathology - Category: Cytology Authors: Source Type: research