Beyond Gastric Specificity: V-Set and Immunoglobulin Domain-Containing 1 (VSIG1) in Digestive Tract Tumors.
V-set and immunoglobulin domain-containing 1 (VSIG1) is a member of the immunoglobulin superfamily that has attracted increasing attention as a differentiation-associated protein in gastrointestinal neoplasia. Although initially described as a gastric-specific marker, accumulating evidence indicates that VSIG1 more accurately reflects gastric-enriched epithelial differentiation rather than strict anatomical origin. This conceptual shift has implications for phenotype-oriented tumor classification and diagnostic interpretation in the context of lineage plasticity. A structured and transparently reported literature search was conducted in PubMed/MEDLINE, Web of Science, and Scopus, covering studies published between 2000 and 2024. Eligible studies included original research and relevant reviews evaluating VSIG1 expression in normal tissues and digestive tract tumors, with emphasis on immunohistochemical patterns and clinicopathological correlations. In gastric cancer, VSIG1 expression consistently correlates with preserved glandular architecture and epithelial differentiation, whereas reduced or absent expression accompanies dedifferentiation and architectural disorganization. Outside the stomach, VSIG1 positivity is uncommon but reproducible in tumors exhibiting gastric-type or mixed differentiation, including settings of hepato-gastric phenotypic overlap. These patterns support interpretation of VSIG1 as a context-dependent indicator of lineage engagement and differentiation state rather than tumor origin or aggressiveness. Current data on independent prognostic value are limited and partially conflicting, and predictive roles remain unsupported, while functional data remain limited.
Authors
Satala Satala, Patrichi Patrichi, Gurau Gurau, Onofrei Popa Onofrei Popa, Mihalache Mihalache
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