Abstract

Oral melanoma is a common canine tumor whose prognosis is considered ominous, but poorly predicted by histology alone. In the present study the gene and protein expression of Leukotriene A4 hydrolase (LTA4H) and Fragile-X-mental retardation-related protein1 (FXR1), both reported as related to metastatic potential in different tumors, were investigated in canine oral melanoma. The main aim of the study was to confirm and quantify the presence of LTA4H and FXR1 genes and protein in oral melanomas. A secondary aim was to investigate their association with histologic prognostic criteria (mitotic count, Ki-67 index). Formalin-fixed-paraffin-embedded canine oral melanomas (36) were collected and histopathological evaluation carried out. Immunolabelling for LTA4H and FXR1 and Ki-67 were performed. RT-PCR evaluated LTA4H and FXR1 gene expressions. Histologically, most tumors were epithelioid cell melanomas (19/36) and were amelanotic, mildly or moderately pigmented (5, 12 and 13/36 respectively), only 6 were highly pigmented. Mitotic count ranged 1-106, Ki-67 index ranged 4.5–52.3. Thirty-two (32/32) melanomas immunolabelled for LTA4H and 33/34 for FXR1. RT-PCR values ranged 0.76–5.11 ΔCt for LTA4H and 0.22–6.24 ΔCt for FXR1. Molecular and immunohistochemical expression of both LTA4H and FXR1 did not statically correlate with mitotic count or Ki-67 index. The present study demonstrates LTA4H and FXR1 gene and protein in canine oral melanoma, however their expression is apparently unrelated to histopathologic prognostic criteria. Although LTA4H and FXR1 seem unrelated to tumor behavior, their extensive expression in the present cohort of cases suggest that they may play a role in canine oral melanoma oncogenesis.

Highlights

  • Melanoma is a common neoplasia in dogs, that can be a diagnostic and prognostic challenge

  • Thirty-six specimens of oral melanomas from 32 dogs were included in the study

  • A caseload of canine oral melanomas was investigated for the expression of two targets, i.e., Leukotriene A4 hydrolase (LTA4H) and Fragile-X-mental retardation-related protein1 (FXR1), at both gene and protein level

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Summary

Introduction

Melanoma is a common neoplasia in dogs, that can be a diagnostic and prognostic challenge. Melanoma represents about 3% of all canine tumors and 7% of all canine malignant tumors. It originates in the oral cavity (62%), the skin (27%), the digit (6%) and, less commonly in the eye (5%) [1, 2]. Melanoma is the most common malignant tumor of the oral cavity in dogs [3]. A subset of oral melanocytic tumors with a more favorable clinical course and prolonged survival have been reported, mainly in dogs with histologically well-differentiated melanocytic neoplasms [6,7,8,9,10]. A parameter to effectively predict the likely progression of the disease in individual dogs is still not available

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