Feline Coccygeal Teratoma: Immunohistochemical Characterization of Immature Tissue Components

This report describes a congenital coccygeal teratoma in a male Burmese cat. A round to oval expansile mass with solid and cystic areas was found ventral to the 5th to 7th caudal vertebrae. Microscopically, the tumour was composed of derivatives of all three primordial germ layers with neuroectodermal predominance. Immunohistochemical double labelling identified immature tissue components in combination with Sox2, a regulator of stem cell proliferation and differentiation. Few Sox2-positive cells co-expressed the neural crest stem cell markers vimentin and neurotrophin receptor p75NTR. Not all Sox2- and p75NTR-positive cells expressed vimentin. An overlapping expression of vimentin-negative and Sox2-, p75NTR-positive cells and GFAP- and p75NTR-positive cells may indicate a transition stage from immature to mature non-myelinating Schwann cells. Periaxin-positive myelinating Schwann cells surrounding neurofilament-positive axons were observed. Sox2 was additionally expressed in immature odontogenic epithelial cells and in immature cells of endodermal origin. Sox2 was not observed in mature cells, with the exception of satellite glial cells and mucous glands. Despite the presence of immature tissue components, no recurrence was observed 1 year after surgical removal.
Source: Journal of Comparative Pathology - Category: Pathology Source Type: research