Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Hannu Haapasalo is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Hannu Haapasalo.


BMC Cancer | 2008

Carbonic anhydrase IX in oligodendroglial brain tumors

Sally Järvelä; Seppo Parkkila; Helena Bragge; Marketta Kähkönen; Anna Kaisa Parkkila; Ylermi Soini; Silvia Pastorekova; Jaromir Pastorek; Hannu Haapasalo

BackgroundCarbonic anhydrase IX is a hypoxia-induced enzyme that has many biologically important functions, including its role in cell adhesion and invasion.MethodsThis study was set out to investigate the role of CA IX in a series of 86 oligodendroglial brain tumors (71 primary and 15 recurrent; 48 pure oligodendrogliomas and 40 mixed oligoastrocytomas).Results80% of the tumors showed CA IX expression by immunohistochemistry. Tumors with moderate or strong CA IX expression had decreased level of cell proliferation compared to weak or no CA IX expression (median 2.9 vs. 5.8, p = 0.015). CA IX correlated with two antioxidative enzymes, manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD) and regulatory gammaglutamylcysteine synthetase (GLCL-R): CA IX expression was significantly higher in MnSOD-positive tumors (p = 0.008) and decreased in GLCL-R-positive tumors (p = 0.044). In Cox multivariate analysis CA IX expression, patient age and histological component (pure oligodendroglioma vs. mixed oligoastrocytoma) showed independent prognostic values (p = 0.009, p = 0.003 and p = 0.022, respectively), CA IX positivity predicting poorer outcome.ConclusionCA IX was proved to be an independent prognostic indicator in oligodendroglial brain tumors, and it also correlates reversely with cell proliferation. It may have a role in the biology of oligodendrogliomas, and most interestingly, as it is mainly expressed in tumor tissue, CA IX could serve as a target molecule for anticancer treatments.


Annals of Neurology | 2009

Apolipoprotein E―Dependent Accumulation of Alzheimer Disease―Related Lesions Begins in Middle Age

Eloise Kok; Satu Haikonen; Teemu M. Luoto; Heini Huhtala; Sirkka Goebeler; Hannu Haapasalo; Pekka J. Karhunen

To study the prevalence and age dependency of senile plaques (SP) and neurofibrillary tangles (NFT), the brain changes characteristic of Alzheimer disease (AD), and their association with apolipoprotein E (APOE) genotypes in a community‐dwelling normal population.


Neurology | 2003

Histopathological differences of myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1) and PROMM/DM2

Anna Vihola; G. Bassez; Giovanni Meola; Shanxiang Zhang; Hannu Haapasalo; Anders Paetau; E. Mancinelli; A. Rouche; Jean-Yves Hogrel; P. Laforêt; Thierry Maisonobe; Jean-François Pellissier; Ralf Krahe; Bruno Eymard; Bjarne Udd

Muscle biopsy findings in DM2 have been reported to be similar to those in DM1. The authors used myosin heavy chain immunohistochemistry and enzyme histochemistry for fiber type differentiation on muscle biopsies. Their results show that DM2 patients display a subpopulation of type 2 nuclear clump and other very small fibers and, hence, preferential type 2 fiber atrophy in contrast to type 1 fiber atrophy in DM1 patients.


Neuro-oncology | 2007

Incidence of gliomas by anatomic location

Suvi Larjavaara; Riitta Mäntylä; Tiina Salminen; Hannu Haapasalo; Jani Raitanen; Juha E. Jääskeläinen; Anssi Auvinen

The anatomic location of a glioma influences prognosis and treatment options. The aim of our study was to describe the distribution of gliomas in different anatomic areas of the brain. A representative population-based sample of 331 adults with glioma was used for preliminary analyses. The anatomic locations for 89 patients from a single center were analyzed in more detail from radiologic imaging and recorded on a three-dimensional 1 x 1 x 1-cm grid. The age-standardized incidence rate of gliomas was 4.7 per 100,000 person-years. The most frequent subtypes were glioblastoma (47%) and grade II-III astrocytoma (23%), followed by oligodendroglioma and mixed glioma. The gliomas were located in the frontal lobe in 40% of the cases, temporal in 29%, parietal in 14%, and occipital lobe in 3%, with 14% in the deeper structures. The difference in distribution between lobes remained after adjustment for their tissue volume: the tumor:volume ratio was 4.5 for frontal, 4.8 for temporal, and 2.3 for parietal relative to the occipital lobe. The area with the densest occurrence was the anterior subcortical brain. Statistically significant spatial clustering was found in the three-dimensional analysis. No differences in location were found among glioblastoma, diffuse astrocytoma, and oligodendroglioma. Our results demonstrate considerable heterogeneity in the anatomic distribution of gliomas within the brain.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2006

Expression of Carbonic Anhydrase IX in Astrocytic Tumors Predicts Poor Prognosis

Joonas Haapasalo; Kristiina Nordfors; Mika Hilvo; Immo J. Rantala; Ylermi Soini; Anna-Kaisa Parkkila; Silvia Pastorekova; Jaromir Pastorek; Seppo Parkkila; Hannu Haapasalo

Purpose: Carbonic anhydrase IX (CA IX) is a hypoxia-inducible enzyme, which is associated with neoplastic growth. Ectopic CA IX expression has been observed in several tumors, whose normal counterparts do not express this enzyme. Normal human brain tissue shows only slight or no expression of CA IX. Experimental Design: We describe CA IX expression in human diffusely infiltrating astrocytomas. The association of CA IX is evaluated with clinicopathologic and molecular factors including cell proliferation and apoptosis as well as the expression of p53 and epidermal growth factor receptor. Results: CA IX immunopositivity was observed in 284 cases of 362 (78%) tumors. The positive areas were often located in close proximity to necrotic regions (P < 0.001). The CA IX immunoreactivity showed strong association with tumor malignancy grades (P < 0.0001). CA IX showed no association with p53 expression nor did it correlate with epidermal growth factor receptor–amplification, apoptosis, or cell proliferation. CA IX intensity had significant prognostic value in univariate (P=0.0011, log-rank test) and multivariate survival analysis (P = 0.038, Cox analysis). Conclusions: CA IX expression is common in diffusely infiltrating high-grade astrocytomas. Our results suggest that CA IX is a useful biomarker for predicting poor prognosis of astrocytic tumors. It may also be a promising target molecule for the improvement of therapeutic interventions in astrocytomas.


Journal of Neuro-oncology | 2006

Female predominance in meningiomas can not be explained by differences in progesterone, estrogen, or androgen receptor expression

Katariina Korhonen; Tiina Salminen; Jani Raitanen; Anssi Auvinen; Jorma Isola; Hannu Haapasalo

The female predominance in meningioma incidence and association between meningioma and breast cancer suggest that growth of meningiomas is hormone-dependent. There are several discrepancies in literature about the proliferative effect of sex hormones on meningiomas. This study aims to evaluate the hormone receptor status of meningiomas and assess its relation to age, sex, histological grade, recurrence, and proliferation activity. The material was based on consecutive patients operated for meningioma at Tampere University Hospital in 1989–1999. The occurrence of progesterone, estrogen and androgen receptor in patients with primary and recurrent meningiomas was studied immunohistochemically by using specific monoclonal antibodies. Hormonal status was determined in 510 tumor samples. 443 samples were from primary meningiomas and 67 from recurrent tumors. Of the␣samples, 455 were benign (WHO grade I), 49 atypical (grade II), and 6 malignant (grade III). Of the primary tumor samples, 88% were progesterone receptor positive, 40% were positive for estrogen and 39% for androgen receptors. Grade I meningiomas had significantly higher incidence for estrogen and androgen receptors than higher grade meningiomas. Estrogen positive tumor samples had significantly higher proliferation index than estrogen negative samples. No difference in expression of sex hormone receptors was observed by sexes or age group. Estrogen and androgen receptors may have more influence on the pathogenesis of meningiomas than earlier thought. The higher incidence of meningiomas in women can not be␣explained by differences of sex hormone receptor expression.


Cancer Research | 2009

PME-1 Protects Extracellular Signal-Regulated Kinase Pathway Activity from Protein Phosphatase 2A-Mediated Inactivation in Human Malignant Glioma

Pietri Puustinen; Melissa R. Junttila; Sari Vanhatupa; Anna A. Sablina; Melissa Hector; Kaisa Teittinen; Olayinka Raheem; Kirsi Ketola; Shujun Lin; Juergen Kast; Hannu Haapasalo; William C. Hahn; Jukka Westermarck

Extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK)/mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway activity is regulated by the antagonist function of activating kinases and inactivating protein phosphatases. Sustained ERK pathway activity is commonly observed in human malignancies; however, the mechanisms by which the pathway is protected from phosphatase-mediated inactivation in the tumor tissue remain obscure. Here, we show that methylesterase PME-1-mediated inhibition of the protein phosphatase 2A promotes basal ERK pathway activity and is required for efficient growth factor response. Mechanistically, PME-1 is shown to support ERK pathway signaling upstream of Raf, but downstream of growth factor receptors and protein kinase C. In malignant gliomas, PME-1 expression levels correlate with both ERK activity and cell proliferation in vivo. Moreover, PME-1 expression significantly correlates with disease progression in human astrocytic gliomas (n=222). Together, these observations identify PME-1 expression as one mechanism by which ERK pathway activity is maintained in cancer cells and suggest an important functional role for PME-1 in the disease progression of human astrocytic gliomas.


Acta Neurochirurgica | 1999

Long-Term Prognosis of Haemangioblastoma of the CNS: Impact of von Hippel-Lindau Disease

Mika Niemelä; S. Lemeta; Paula Summanen; Tom Böhling; Markku Sainio; Juha Kere; K. Poussa; R. Sankila; Hannu Haapasalo; Helena Kääriäinen; E. Pukkala; Juha Jääskeläinen

Summary¶ The aim was to assess the frequency of von Hippel-Lindau disease (VHL) and the long-term prognosis of VHL and non-VHL patients among 110 consecutive patients with haemangioblastoma (HB) of the CNS treated between 1953 and 1993 at one neurosurgical unit. To reveal VHL manifestations we performed a detailed clinical and radiological examination (neuraxis and abdomen) (61/110), VHL-gene mutation analysis (40/110), and collection of all available clinical, imaging, operative and autopsy data from the hospitals involved. All patients were followed-up with a median of 14 years (excluding 14 operative deaths), and no patient was lost to follow-up. Altogether 49 patients died during the follow-up. In the 14 VHL patients (13%), HB(s) of the CNS were detected at a median age of 33 years, retinal HB(s) at 39 years, and renal cell carcinoma (RCC) at 43 years. The frequency of VHL in patients operated on for HB(s) was 29% before the age of 25 years, 19% between 25 and 45 years, and only 2% after 45 years. HB patients not meeting the VHL criteria had internal organ cysts in 14%. One non-VHL patient (4%) had two adjacent HBs in the same cyst wall. The growth rates of non-VHL and VHL-related HBs were similar as indicated by the median time to recurrence and the proliferation indices (MIB-1). Recurrence of the HB in patients whose primary operation was considered radical developed in four of the 10 VHL patients at a median of 19 years, and in nine of the 74 non-VHL patients at a median of 11 years. The median length of life of all VHL and non-VHL patients was 46 and 63 years, respectively. In VHL, RCC and HBs were equal causes of death.


Neuropathology and Applied Neurobiology | 2008

Stem cell protein BMI‐1 is an independent marker for poor prognosis in oligodendroglial tumours

Valtteri Häyry; Olli Tynninen; Hannu Haapasalo; J. Wölfer; W. Paulus; M. Hasselblatt; Hannu Sariola; A. Paetau; S. Sarna; M. Niemelä; Kirmo Wartiovaara; Nina N. Nupponen

Aims: The polycomb factor BMI‐1 has recently been implicated in tumorigenesis of the central nervous system in several experimental animal models. However, the significance of BMI‐1 in human glioma has not been investigated. Here we describe expression of the polycomb protein BMI‐1 and its downstream targets p16Ink4a and MDM2 in both high‐ and low‐grade human glioma. Methods: Tumour samples were collected from 305 adult patients treated for primary grades 2–4 gliomas between 1980 and 2006 in Finland and Germany. BMI‐1, p16 and MDM2 expression was evaluated using immunohistochemistry in representative paraffin‐embedded tumour tissue. The significance of observed immunoreactivity, age at onset, gender, histopathological findings and proliferative index was analysed in univariate and multivariate survival models. Results: BMI‐1 was expressed in all histologic types of diffuse gliomas. We found a significant correlation (P = 0.007) between the frequency of BMI‐1 immunoreactive tumour cells and poor survival in World Health Organization grades II–III oligodendrogliomas and oligoastrocytomas (n = 62). The median survival of patients grouped by low, intermediate or high frequency of BMI‐1 immunoreactive tumour cells was 191 months, 151 months and 68 months, respectively. This association was also significant in the Cox multivariate regression model. Nuclear p16 immunopositivity predicted better survival in astrocytomas and an inverse correlation between p16 expression and the Ki‐67 mitotic index was also observed. Conclusions: BMI‐1 is found in all histological types of gliomas and the relative protein expression of BMI‐1 is a novel independent prognostic marker in oligodendroglial tumours.


Acta Neuropathologica | 2006

Perinuclear leucine-rich repeats and immunoglobulin-like domain proteins (LRIG1-3) as prognostic indicators in astrocytic tumors

Dongsheng Guo; Jonas Nilsson; Hannu Haapasalo; Olayinka Raheem; Tommy Bergenheim; Håkan Hedman; Roger Henriksson

We have previously characterized three human leucine-rich repeats and immunoglobulin-like domains (LRIG) genes and proteins, named LRIG1-3 and proposed that they may act as suppressors of tumor growth. The LRIG1 transmembrane protein antagonizes the activity of epidermal growth factor receptor family receptor tyrosine kinases. In this study, we evaluated the mRNA expression level of LRIG1-3 in human glioma cell lines and control-matched glioma tissues, characterized the sub-cellular localization of an LRIG3–GFP fusion protein, and analyzed the relationship between sub-cellular localization of LRIG1-3 and clinical parameters in 404 astrocytic tumors by immunohistochemistry. LRIG1-3 mRNA was detected in all human glioma cell lines and matched glioma samples, with large differences in the expression levels. Ectopically expressed LRIG3–GFP localized to perinuclear and cytoplasmic compartments, and to the cell surface of transfected glioma cells. Perinuclear staining of LRIG1-3 was associated with low WHO grade and better survival of the patients. Perinuclear staining of LRIG3 was associated with a lower proliferation index and was in addition to tumor grade, an independent prognostic factor. Furthermore, within the groups of grade III and grade IV tumors, perinuclear staining of LRIG3 significantly correlated with better survival. These results indicate that expression and sub-cellular localization of LRIG1-3 might be of importance in the pathogenesis and prognosis of astrocytic tumors.

Collaboration


Dive into the Hannu Haapasalo's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bjarne Udd

University of Helsinki

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ylermi Soini

University of Eastern Finland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge