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Featured researches published by Joonas Haapasalo.


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.


Neuro-oncology | 2008

Identification of an alternatively spliced isoform of carbonic anhydrase XII in diffusely infiltrating astrocytic gliomas

Joonas Haapasalo; Mika Hilvo; Kristiina Nordfors; Hannu Haapasalo; Seppo Parkkila; Alise Hyrskyluoto; Immo Rantala; Abdul Waheed; William S. Sly; Silvia Pastorekova; Jaromir Pastorek; Anna-Kaisa Parkkila

Carbonic anhydrase XII (CA XII) is a transmembrane enzyme that is associated with neoplastic growth. CA XII has been proposed to be involved in acidification of the extracellular milieu, creating an appropriate microenvironment for rapid tumor growth. Because RNA sequence databases have indicated that two isoforms of CA XII might exist in human tissues, and because alternatively spliced protein forms have been linked to aggressive behavior of cancer cells, we designed a study to evaluate the presence of the two forms of CA XII in diffuse astrocytomas, a tumor type known for its aggressive and often noncurable behavior. Reverse transcription PCR of tumor samples surprisingly revealed that CA XII present in diffuse astrocytomas is mainly encoded by a shorter mRNA variant. We further showed by Western blotting that anti-CA XII antibody recognized both isoforms in the glioblastoma cell lines, and we then evaluated the expression of CA XII in astrocytomas using immunohistochemistry and correlated the results with various clinicopathological and molecular factors. Of 370 diffusely infiltrating astrocytomas, 363 cases (98%) showed immunoreactions for CA XII. Importantly, CA XII expression correlated with poorer patient prognosis in univariate (p = 0.010, log-rank test) and multivariate survival analyses (p = 0.039, Cox analysis). From these results, we conclude that CA XII is commonly expressed in diffuse astrocytomas and that it might be used as a biomarker of poor prognosis. The absence of 11 amino acids in the shorter isoform, which seems to be common in astrocytomas, may affect the normal quaternary structure and biological function of CA XII.


BMC Neuroscience | 2009

Expression of iron-related genes in human brain and brain tumors

Milla M Hänninen; Joonas Haapasalo; Hannu Haapasalo; Robert E. Fleming; Robert S. Britton; Bruce R. Bacon; Seppo Parkkila

BackgroundDefective iron homeostasis may be involved in the development of some diseases within the central nervous system. Although the expression of genes involved in normal iron balance has been intensively studied in other tissues, little is known about their expression in the brain. We investigated the mRNA levels of hepcidin (HAMP), HFE, neogenin (NEO1), transferrin receptor 1 (TFRC), transferrin receptor 2 (TFR2), and hemojuvelin (HFE2) in normal human brain, brain tumors, and astrocytoma cell lines. The specimens included 5 normal brain tissue samples, 4 meningiomas, one medulloblastoma, 3 oligodendrocytic gliomas, 2 oligoastrocytic gliomas, 8 astrocytic gliomas, and 3 astrocytoma cell lines.ResultsExcept for hemojuvelin, all genes studied had detectable levels of mRNA. In most tumor types, the pattern of gene expression was diverse. Notable findings include high expression of transferrin receptor 1 in the hippocampus and medulla oblongata compared to other brain regions, low expression of HFE in normal brain with elevated HFE expression in meningiomas, and absence of hepcidin mRNA in astrocytoma cell lines despite expression in normal brain and tumor specimens.ConclusionThese results indicate that several iron-related genes are expressed in normal brain, and that their expression may be dysregulated in brain tumors.


Neuro-oncology | 2007

Carbonic anhydrase II in the endothelium of glial tumors: A potential target for therapy

Joonas Haapasalo; Kristiina Nordfors; Sally Järvelä; Helena Bragge; Immo Rantala; Anna-Kaisa Parkkila; Hannu Haapasalo; Seppo Parkkila

Carbonic anhydrase isozyme II (CA II) is a cytosolic enzyme that is highly expressed in most organs, including the brain, where it is mainly located in the oligodendrocytes. Recent studies have shown that its expression is induced in the endothelium of neovessels in melanoma and esophageal, renal, and lung cancer. Immunological studies further indicate that CA II represents a major target antigen stimulating an autoantibody response in melanoma patients. These results prompted us to investigate endothelial CA II expression in two types of brain cancer: oligodendrogliomas and astrocytomas. A series of 255 astrocytoma and 71 oligodendroglial tumor specimens was immunostained for CA II. The staining results were correlated with a number of different clinicopathological factors and survival data. CA II showed weak or no expression in low-grade tumors, while grade 3 mixed oligoastrocytoma and glioblastoma multiforme were the most positively stained tumor types. Survival analysis indicated that endothelial CA II staining is significantly associated with a poor prognosis in patients with astrocytomas. About 17% of patients with CA II-negative tumors (weak or no endothelial signal) were still alive at the end of the follow-up period of five years. The presence of CA II in the tumor endothelium suggests that it may play an important functional role in tumor metabolism. From a clinical perspective, the results also open new avenues for selecting tumor types for dendritic cell therapy trials.


BMC Cancer | 2010

The tumour-associated carbonic anhydrases CA II, CA IX and CA XII in a group of medulloblastomas and supratentorial primitive neuroectodermal tumours: an association of CA IX with poor prognosis

Kristiina Nordfors; Joonas Haapasalo; Miikka Korja; Anssi Niemelä; Jukka Laine; Anna-Kaisa Parkkila; Silvia Pastorekova; Jaromir Pastorek; Abdul Waheed; William S. Sly; Seppo Parkkila; Hannu Haapasalo

BackgroundMedulloblastomas (MBs) and supratentorial primitive neuroectodermal tumours (PNETs) are the most common highly aggressive paediatric brain tumours. In spite of extensive research on these tumours, there are only few known biomarkers or therapeutic target proteins, and the prognosis of patients with these tumours remains poor. Our aim was to investigate whether carbonic anhydrases (CAs), enzymes commonly overexpressed in various tumours including glioblastomas and oligodendrogliomas, are present in MBs and PNETs, and whether their expression can be correlated with patient prognosis.MethodsWe determined the expression of the tumour-associated carbonic anhydrases CA II, CA IX and CA XII in a series of MB/PNET specimens (n = 39) using immunohistochemistry.ResultsEndothelial CA II, cytoplasmic CA II, CA IX and CA XII were expressed in 49%, 73%, 23% and 11% of the tumours, respectively. CA II was detected in the neovessel endothelium and the tumour cell cytoplasm. CA IX was mainly expressed in the tumour cells located in perinecrotic areas. CA XII showed the most homogenous distribution within the tumours. Importantly, CA IX expression predicted poor prognosis in both univariate (p = 0.041) and multivariate analyses (p = 0.016).ConclusionsWe suggest that CA IX should be considered a potential prognostic and therapeutic target in MBs and PNETs.


Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2005

Ultrarapid Ki-67 immunostaining in frozen section interpretation of gliomas.

Joonas Haapasalo; A Mennander; P Helen; Hannu Haapasalo; Jorma Isola

Background: Astrocytic tumours, the most common gliomas, are often classified intraoperatively using standard morphological staining. The final diagnosis and grading of gliomas on paraffin wax sections is often assisted by Ki-67 immunohistochemistry, but standard immunostaining protocols take too long to be used intraoperatively. Aims: To investigate a new rapid Ki-67 immunohistochemical test for its use in an intraoperative setting. Methods: The new Ki-67 immunostaining (Ultrarapid-Ki67®) method on frozen sections can be carried out in 10 minutes. Thirty four pilocytic and diffuse astrocytomas were immunostained by rapid Ki-67 and results were compared with corresponding MIB-1 staining, histological grading, and prognosis. Results: The staining protocol was practical to perform and the results were morphologically and quantitatively indistinguishable from those after immunostaining with MIB-1, an antibody recognising Ki-67 in paraffin wax embedded tissue. A comparison of Ultrarapid-Ki67 and MIB-1 immunostaining of paraffin wax sections showed almost identical quantitative correlation in astrocytic gliomas (r = 0.916; p<0.001). The Ultrarapid-Ki67 indices (percentage of positive cells) of low grade (I/II) astrocytomas ranged from 0% to 6.1%, whereas those of representative high grade (III/IV) tumours were significantly higher (range, 5.6–45%; p<0.001). The best prognostic cutoff point for Ultrarapid-Ki67 was 7.5%, which divided diffuse grade II–IV astrocytomas into significantly differing subsets (p = 0.0008). Conclusion: Ultrarapid-Ki67 immunostaining is a useful adjunct to morphological diagnosis and grading of astrocytic tumours, and as a fast test (∼10 minutes for staining plus three to four minutes for scoring), it could be used in routine intraoperative diagnosis of gliomas and other neoplastic diseases.


Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2015

Twist predicts poor outcome of patients with astrocytic glioma

Kristiina Nordfors; Joonas Haapasalo; Katri Mäkelä; Kirsi J. Granberg; Matti Nykter; Miikka Korja; Timo Paavonen; Hannu Haapasalo; Ylermi Soini

Aims and methods Epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) has previously been linked to glioma invasion and progression. To determine whether EMT regulators, Twist and Zeb1, had clinical significance in astrocytic gliomas, the association of Twist and Zeb1 with clinicopathological and molecular factors was studied in 269 astrocytoma samples. Results Twist and Zeb1 were widely expressed in astrocytic gliomas, but the expression of the former did not correlate with that of the latter. Stronger Twist expression levels were associated with higher WHO grades (p=0.001), whereas Zeb1 did not correlate with WHO grades. We found no association between Twist and proliferation activity (Ki67/MIB-1), p53 status, epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) amplification or neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) expression. There was no significant difference in Twist or Zeb1 expression when primary and secondary gliomas were analysed. Tumours with high Twist expression were IDH1 negative (p=0.009). High hypoxia-inducible factor-1α expression correlated significantly with positive Twist expression (p<0.001), whereas it was not associated with Zeb1 expression. Zeb1 expression did not correlate with proliferation, EGFR or IDH1. Nevertheless, we did find a correlation between high Zeb1 expression and low p53 expression levels (p=0.027). Positive NCAM expression was significantly associated with Zeb1 positivity (p=0.022). Zeb1 had no association with patient survival, whereas positive Twist expression predicted poor survival for patients in both univariate (p<0.001) and multivariable analyses (p=0.027). Conclusions EMT regulators, Twist and Zeb1, are common features of infiltrating astrocytomas, and Twist is upregulated in glioblastomas in particular. Twist may be a novel marker for poor prognosis in glioma patients.


Clinical Neuropathology | 2007

Peroxiredoxins and antioxidant enzymes in pilocytic astrocytomas

Kristiina Nordfors; Joonas Haapasalo; Pauli Helén; Anders Paetau; Leo Paljärvi; Hannu Kalimo; Vuokko L. Kinnula; Ylermi Soini; Hannu Haapasalo

OBJECTIVE Peroxiredoxins are antioxidant enzymes (AOEs), which are redox-regulated thiol proteins with potential effects on the growth, invasion and drug resistance of neoplastic cells. In this study, their biology and clinical significance were examined in pilocytic astrocytomas (PAs). MATERIAL AND METHODS The expression of peroxiredoxins (Prx I-VI) was investigated in 105 PAs by the means of immunohistochemistry and compared with the expression of selected other antioxidant enzymes, cell proliferation, angiogenesis, apoptosis, p53, histopathology and patient survival. RESULTS Peroxiredoxins were strongly expressed in general suggesting that oxidative damage and consequent defense takes place during the progression of pilocytic astrocytomas. In agreement with this hypothesis, several other AOEs correlated with the degenerative features and angiogenesis possibly associated with reactive oxygen species-derived cellular damage. Moreover, the expression of the AOEs was associated with each other indicating a concurrent activation of the enzymes. With the exception of manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD), a strong expression of AOEs was generally associated with higher cell proliferation. Prx VI seemed to have a positive association with a longer recurrence-free interval while other AOEs had no association with patient survival. Many AOEs, such as MnSOD, induce chemo- and radioresistance and are highly elevated in aggressive malignancies. PAs lack this confounding factor, and these tumors are treated only by surgery. CONCLUSIONS Taken together, the results of this study on pilocytic astrocytomas suggest that the levels of Prxs and other AOEs and their related thiol proteins are generally strongly expressed in these tumors. At least Prx VI can contribute to tumor behavior which can make it a potential prognostic factor.


Neuro-oncology | 2017

Strong FGFR3 staining is a marker for FGFR3 fusions in diffuse gliomas

Kirsi J. Granberg; Matti Annala; Birgitta Lehtinen; Juha Kesseli; Joonas Haapasalo; Pekka Ruusuvuori; Olli Yli-Harja; Tapio Visakorpi; Hannu Haapasalo; Matti Nykter; Zhang Wei

Abstract Background Inhibitors of fibroblast growth factor receptors (FGFRs) have recently arisen as a promising treatment option for patients with FGFR alterations. Gene fusions involving FGFR3 and transforming acidic coiled-coil protein 3 (TACC3) have been detected in diffuse gliomas and other malignancies, and fusion-positive cases have responded well to FGFR inhibition. As high FGFR3 expression has been detected in fusion-positive tumors, we sought to determine the clinical significance of FGFR3 protein expression level as well as its potential for indicating FGFR3 fusions. Methods We performed FGFR3 immunohistochemistry on tissue microarrays containing 676 grades II–IV astrocytomas and 116 grades II–III oligodendroglial tumor specimens. Fifty-one cases were further analyzed using targeted sequencing. Results Moderate to strong FGFR3 staining was detected in gliomas of all grades, was more common in females, and was associated with poor survival in diffuse astrocytomas. Targeted sequencing identified FGFR3-TACC3 fusions and an FGFR3-CAMK2A fusion in 10 of 15 strongly stained cases, whereas no fusions were found in 36 negatively to moderately stained cases. Fusion-positive cases were predominantly female and negative for IDH and EGFR/PDGFRA/MET alterations. These and moderately stained cases show lower MIB-1 proliferation index than negatively to weakly stained cases. Furthermore, stronger FGFR3 expression was commonly observed in malignant tissue regions of lower cellularity in fusion-negative cases. Importantly, subregional negative FGFR3 staining was also observed in a few fusion-positive cases. Conclusions Strong FGFR3 protein expression is indicative of FGFR3 fusions and may serve as a clinically applicable predictive marker for treatment regimens based on FGFR inhibitors.


Histology and Histopathology | 2014

Hsp27 and its expression pattern in diffusely infiltrating astrocytomas.

Mäkelä Ks; Joonas Haapasalo; Ilvesaro Jm; Seppo Parkkila; Timo Paavonen; Hannu Haapasalo

AIMS Heat shock protein 27 (Hsp27) is induced by cell stress conditions. In the presence of oxidative stress it functions as an antioxidant. To study the putative expression patterns and clinical significance of Hsp27, we assessed the associations between Hsp27, R132H mutation of Isocitrate dehydrogenase1 (IDH1-R132H), Hypoxia-inducible factor subunit alpha (HIF-1 alpha), Carbonic anhydrase IX (CA IX), and patient prognosis in astrocytic gliomas. METHODS Tissue micro-array samples of 295 grade II-IV astrocytomas were stained immunohistochemically for Hsp27, IDH1-R132H, HIF-1 alpha, and CA IX. We tested their relationship with clinicopathological features and patient survival. RESULTS There was a significant correlation between Hsp27 expression and increasing WHO grade (p<0.001). Hsp27 expression correlated significantly with IDH1 mutation when studied within the entire cohort (p<0.001) as well as separately in WHO grade II and III tumors (p=0.006 and 0.002, respectively). IDH1 mutation and HIF-1 alpha positive staining were detected simultaneously (p<0.001). In IDH1 mutated tumors, positive HIF-1 alpha staining correlated with CA IX expression (p=0.027), whereas no such correlation was found in IDH1 non-mutated tumors. IDH1 mutation was associated with a low cell proliferation index (p=0.001) and HIF-1 alpha with increasing proliferation (p = 0.003). Hsp27 expression was associated with a shorter rate of patient survival in univariate survival analysis (p=0.001). In multivariate survival analysis, patient age, IDH1 mutation and HIF-1 alpha appeared as independent prognostic factors (p<0.000, <0.000 and 0.011 respectively) CONCLUSIONS Hsp27 expression is associated with increasing WHO grade and patient prognosis in astrocytic gliomas. The results suggest that IDH1 mutation may have an effect on the expression pathways of Hsp27 and CA IX.

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Ylermi Soini

University of Eastern Finland

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Kirsi J. Granberg

Tampere University of Technology

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