@article{688ad5601a2711df8ed1000ea68e967b,
title = "Changes in the profile of simple mucin-type O-glycans and polypeptide GalNAc-transferases in human testis and testicular neoplasms are associated with germ cell maturation and tumour differentiation",
abstract = "Testicular germ cell tumours (TGCT) exhibit remarkable ability to differentiate into virtually all somatic tissue types. In this study, we investigated changes in mucin-type O-glycosylation, which have been associated with somatic cell differentiation and cancer. Expression profile of simple mucin-type O-glycans (Tn, sialyl-Tn, T), histo-blood group H and A variants and six polypeptide GalNAc-transferases (T1-4, T6, T11) that control the site and density of O-glycosylation were analysed by immunohistochemistry during human testis development and in TGCT. Normal testis showed a restricted pattern; gonocytes expressed abundant sialyl-Tn and sialyl-T, and adult spermatogonia were devoid of any glycans, whereas spermatocytes and spermatids expressed exclusively glycans Tn and T and the GalNAc-T3 isoform. A subset of mature ejaculated spermatozoa expressed an additional glycan sialyl-T. The pattern found in testicular neoplasms recapitulated the developmental order: Pre-invasive carcinoma in situ (CIS) cells and seminoma expressed fetal type sialylated glycans in keeping with their gonocyte-like phenotype. Neither simple mucin-type O-glycans nor GalNAc-transferase isoforms were found in undifferentiated nonseminoma, i.e. embryonal carcinoma, whereas teratomas expressed them all to some extent but in a disorganized manner. We concluded that simple mucin-type O-glycans and their transferases are developmentally regulated in the human testis, with profound changes associated with neoplasia. The restricted O-glycosylation pattern in haploid germ cells suggests a role in their maturation or egg recognition/fertilization warranting further studies in male infertility, whereas the findings in TGCT provide new diagnostic tools and support our hypothesis that testicular cancer is a developmental disease of germ cell differentiation.",
author = "{Rajpert-De Meyts}, E and Poll, {S N} and I Goukasian and C Jeanneau and Herlihy, {A S} and Bennett, {E P} and Skakkebaek, {N E} and H Clausen and A Giwercman and U Mandel",
note = "Keywords: Antigens, Tumor-Associated, Carbohydrate; Antigens, Viral, Tumor; Cell Differentiation; Cell Transformation, Neoplastic; Gene Expression Profiling; Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic; Humans; Male; N-Acetylgalactosaminyltransferases; Phenotype; Spermatogenesis; Spermatozoa; Testicular Neoplasms; Testis",
year = "2007",
doi = "10.1007/s00428-007-0478-4",
language = "English",
volume = "451",
pages = "805--14",
journal = "Virchows Archiv",
issn = "0945-6317",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "4",
}