N. Auersperg et al., EXPRESSION OF 2 MUCIN ANTIGENS IN CULTURED HUMAN OVARIAN SURFACE EPITHELIUM - INFLUENCE OF A FAMILY HISTORY OF OVARIAN-CANCER, American journal of obstetrics and gynecology, 173(2), 1995, pp. 558-565
OBJECTIVE: The genetic changes in hereditary ovarian cancer syndromes
suggest that the phenotype of ovarian surface epithelium in women with
familial ovarian cancer might be altered. To test this hypothesis, we
compared two tumor markers, CA 125 and 2G3, in cultures of overtly no
rmal epithelium from patients with and without familial ovarian cancer
. STUDY DESIGN: Surface epithelia from 18 patients with no family hist
ory of ovarian cancer, five with family histories that were insufficie
nt to be classified as familial, and seven with strong family historie
s were examined by immunofluorescence, immunocytochemistry, and radioi
mmunoassay. The influence of cell density, morphologic features, propa
gation in culture, and immortalization with SV40 on the expression of
the markers was investigated. RESULTS: CA 125 occurred in cells with e
pithelial rather than atypical morphologic features. In cultures with
no family history and minor family history, CA 125 was present in up t
o 45% cells in passage 1 but in only <5% cells in 14 of 16 cultures by
passages 3 to 4. In contrast, nine of 10 cultures with family history
retained > 5% CA 125-positive cells in passages 3 to 4. This prolonge
d presence of CA 125 correlated with a persisting epithelial phenotype
, whereas most cells with no family history and minor family history b
ecame atypical by passage 3. Immortalization eliminated CA 125 in all
three types of cells. 2G3 bound to few cells in low passage, independe
nt of family history and morphologic features. The proportion of 2G3-e
xpressing cells increased significantly with immortalization in all cu
ltures, independent of family history. Ovarian carcinoma lines express
ed both markers. CONCLUSION: In cultures of ovarian surface epithelium
2G3 expression increases with immortalization, whereas CA125 is lost
with immortalization but correlates with epithelial cell morphologic f
eatures and with family history. The results suggest that there may be
phenotypic changes in overtly normal ovarian surface epithelium of wo
men with family histories of ovarian cancer.