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Query: EC:2.7.10.1 (
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95,504
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Prostatic adenocarcinoma with a signet ring cell (SRC) component is a rare, incompletely characterized variant that must be distinguished from similar tumors of bladder or gastric origin. In this study, we used mucin and immunoperoxidase stains on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded sections from 12 prostatic adenocarcinomas with SRC components, with antibodies to prostate-specific antigen (PSA), cytokeratins, MIB-1, bcl-2, c-
MET
, CD44v6, and CD44v7; we performed a comparison study on six bladder and seven gastric carcinomas with SRCs. The prostatic SRC component was always associated with the usual high-grade adenocarcinoma. Both components were positive for PSA, AE1/AE3, and CAM 5.2 (12 cases of 12) and also expressed c-
MET
(5 cases of 9), CD44v6 (9 of 10), and CDv7 (9 of 10). Only rare cells stained for bcl-2 (3 cases of 9). The mean MIB-1 proliferation index was 8%. Intracellular mucin was identified (periodic acid-Schiff with diastase predigestion (PAS-D) in 9 cases of 10, mucicarmine in 5 of 10, alcian blue in 6 of 10). Bladder and gastric tumors were positive for PSA (3 cases of 6 and 2 of 7, respectively), using a polyclonal antibody, and for bcl-2 (5 cases of 6, 2 of 7), c-
MET
(6 of 6, 6 of 7), CD44v6 (5 of 6, 6 of 7), and CD44v7 (4 of 6, 4 of 7), with mean MIB-1 proliferation indices of 15 and 35%, respectively. All were negative for
cytokeratin
34 beta E12. We conclude that prostatic adenocarcinomas with SRC components are typically accompanied by high-grade adenocarcinoma; are variably positive for mucin, with PAS-D being the most sensitive stain; show expression of PSA, cytokeratins, MIB-1, bcl-2, c-
MET
, and CD44 similar to that shown by high-grade adenocarcinoma components; have a low MIB-1 proliferation index; and are not always distinguishable from SRC components of bladder and stomach carcinomas with any of the above stains, including PSA.
...
PMID:Prostatic carcinoma with signet ring cells: a clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical analysis of 12 cases, with review of the literature. 964 93
Our previous studies in the hamster pancreatic cancer model have indicated that pancreatic ductal adenocarcinomas derive not only from ductal/ductular cells but also from islets. To verify the presence of carcinogen-responsive cells within islets, we tested the effect of the pancreatic carcinogen N-nitrosobis(2-oxopropyl)amine (BOP) on recently established continuous hamster pancreatic islet culture. Isolated pure pancreatic islets of hamsters were treated in vitro with BOP at a concentration of 0.25 mM three times a week for 19 weeks. Each treatment week was designed as a stage. The growth of these cells, designated KL5B, was compared with untreated cultured islets, designated KL5N. As in our previous study, between 14 and 21 days of culture, exocrine and intermediary cells developed within both KL5N and KL5B islets, which were then replaced by undifferentiated cells. No differences were found in the growth patterns of KL5N and KL5B until stage 4, when KL5B cells showed accelerated cell growth and cell pleomorphism, which increased gradually at later stages of treatment. Anchorage-independent and in vivo growth did not appear until stage 19. Mutation of c-Ki-ras at codon 12 (GGT-->GAT) was detected in KL5B cells but not in KL5N cells. In vivo KL5B cells formed anaplastic invasive cancer with areas of glandular formation, overexpressed TGF-alpha and
EGFR
, expressed
cytokeratin
, vimentin, laminin and alpha-1 antitrypsin and reacted strongly with L-phytohemagglutinin and tomato lectin. Some cells within islets are responsive to the carcinogenic effects of BOP. Whether these cells represent islet cell precursors (stem cells) or malignant transdifferentiated islet cells remains to be seen.
...
PMID:Induction of adenocarcinoma from hamster pancreatic islet cells treated with N-nitrosobis(2-oxopropyl)amine in vitro. 1006 71
We describe the clinicopathologic, immunophenotypic, and molecular findings in 4 cases of anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) arising in the small intestine. All patients were men with acute symptoms of gastrointestinal tract obstruction. The clinical preoperative diagnosis was gastrointestinal carcinoma in 3 cases, and pancreatic carcinoma in 1 case. Histologic examination revealed cohesive aggregates of neoplastic cells, with multiple vesicular nuclei, prominent nucleoli, and abundant amphophilic cytoplasm. There was no clinical or histopathologic evidence of enteropathy. All cases were CD30+, and all showed evidence of T-cell lineage with cytotoxic potential by expression of CD3, CD43, or CD45RO; T-cell intracellular antigen-1; or perforin. One tumor showed p80 and
anaplastic lymphoma kinase
(
ALK
) overexpression corroborated by the presence of the t(2:5). One tumor expressed Epstein-Barr virus latent membrane protein. In all cases, the tumor cells were negative for CD20, CD15, CD56, and
cytokeratin
. Polymerase chain reaction revealed clonal rearrangements of the T-cell receptor gamma-chain gene, without evidence of immunoglobulin heavy-chain gene rearrangement. The diagnosis of primary bowel ALCL is facilitated by immunophenotypic and molecular studies. With 24 months of clinical follow-up, only the patient with the t(2:5)-positive tumor is alive and free of disease, suggesting that p80/
ALK
overexpression may be a good prognostic indicator.
...
PMID:Primary anaplastic large cell lymphoma of the small intestine. 1076 69
We report on a rare distinctive variant of infiltrating ductal carcinoma characterized by sebaceous differentiation of tumor cells. The neoplasm was identified in a lumpectomy specimen from a 45-year-old woman with extensive metastatic disease. In addition to conventional in situ and invasive ductal components, approximately half of the tumor cells exhibited a phenotype resembling tumors of the sebaceous skin appendage with coarsely vacuolated cytoplasm and peripherally displaced nuclei. The sebaceous moiety was also present in the distant metastatic deposits. There was no evidence of mucin production by tumor cells. Ultrastructurally, empty-appearing non-membrane bound vacuoles attested to the sebaceous cells' lipid content. The immunoprofile of the lesion included positivity for
cytokeratin
and epithelial membrane antigen. Vimentin, S100 protein and carcinoembryonic antigen were not expressed. Most tumor cell nuclei reacted with antibodies to oestrogen and progesterone receptors but failed to show overexpression of the
HER2
/neu protein. The MIB-1 labeling index averaged 16%. At variance with sebaceous breast carcinomas on record, the present case is notable for its prolonged clinical course.
...
PMID:Sebaceous carcinoma of the breast. 1069 80
Platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) B-chain and PDGF receptor beta (
PDGFR
beta) are essential for glomerulogenesis. Mice deficient in PDGF B-chain or
PDGFR
beta exhibit an abnormal glomerular phenotype characterized by total lack of mesangial cells. In this study, we localized
PDGFR
beta in the developing rat kidney and explored the biological effects of PDGF in metanephric mesenchymal cells in an attempt to determine the mechanism by which PDGF regulates mesangial cell development. Immunohistochemical and in situ hybridization studies of rat embryonic kidneys reveal that
PDGFR
beta localizes to undifferentiated metanephric mesenchyme and is later expressed in the cleft of the comma-shaped and S-shaped bodies and in more mature glomeruli in a mesangial distribution. We also isolated and characterized cells from rat metanephric mesenchyme. Metanephric mesenchymal cells express vimentin and alpha-smooth muscle actin but not
cytokeratin
. These cells also express functional
PDGFR
beta, as demonstrated by autophosphorylation of the receptor as well as activation of phosphatidylinositol 3 kinase in response to PDGF B-chain homodimer. PDGF B-chain also induces migration and proliferation of metanephric mesenchymal cells. Taken together with the fact that PDGF B-chain is expressed in the glomerular epithelium and mesangial area, as demonstrated in the human embryonic kidney, we suggest that PDGF B-chain acts in a paracrine fashion to stimulate the migration and proliferation of mesangial cell precursors from undifferentiated metanephric mesenchyme to the mesangial area. PDGF B-chain also likely stimulates proliferation of mesangial cell precursors in an autocrine fashion once these cells migrate to the glomerular tuft.
...
PMID:Platelet-derived growth factor receptor beta regulates migration and DNA synthesis in metanephric mesenchymal cells. 1073 1
A study to compare the immuno-histochemical profile of the human rete ovarii, and epoophoron, with the Fallopian tube and ovarian surface epithelium was performed with 31 antibodies and antisera. A reaction was present in the epithelial cytoplasm of the rete ovarii and epoophoron of mesonephric origin, for vimentin, GFAP,
cytokeratin
markers, (AE1/AE3, MNF116; Cam 5.2, 34 beta E12 and for the monospecific antibodies to cytokeratins 7 and 19), heat shock protein 27, in the cell membrane for HBME-1, EMA and in the subepithelial collagen for collagen IV. Reactions were present only in the epithelium in the rete ovarii for
EGFR
(one case) and CA-125 (four cases). A reaction was present in the epithelium of the epoophoron only for Ber-EP-4 and S100. There was no reaction with antibodies for desmin, neurofilament protein, cytokeratins 20 or 14, actin, calretinin, E-cadherin, C-erb-B2, or CEA (monoclonal and polyclonal reagents). The immuno-histochemical profile of the Fallopian tube was consistent with its para-mesonephric origin and that in the ovarian surface epithelium was consistent with a proposed modified mesothelial origin. This study provides an immunohistochemical profile of these structures with a large panel of commonly available antibodies and antisera, confirming and extending the findings described in previous studies.
...
PMID:An immunohistochemical study of the rete ovarii and epoophoron. 1084 Aug 24
Small cell carcinoma of the breast is an uncommon neoplasm that has been reported rarely in the literature. The aim of this study was to characterize better the pathologic and immunohistochemical features of this neoplasm. Nine examples of mammary small cell carcinoma were retrieved from the authors' consultation files and reviewed. The patients ranged in age from 43 to 70 years. Two patients had a previous history of cutaneous malignant melanoma and one had prior lobular carcinoma in situ and atypical duct hyperplasia in the same breast as the small cell carcinoma. Eight patients presented with a mass in the breast; one patient had an axillary tumor. Tumor size ranged from 1.3 to 5.0 cm (mean, 2.6 cm). Histologically, the nine tumors had characteristics of small cell carcinoma with high mitotic activity and necrosis. A dimorphic histologic appearance was observed in four tumors. In one instance, this consisted of small cell carcinoma merging with invasive lobular carcinoma. In three cases, small cell carcinoma was present together with invasive, poorly differentiated duct carcinoma; invasive carcinoma with "lobular and gland-forming elements"; and focal squamous differentiation, respectively. Lymphatic tumor emboli were identified in four instances. An in situ component was seen in seven tumors; five were of the small cell type in ducts and two were of the ductal type with high nuclear grade. Immunohistochemical analysis showed consistent staining for
cytokeratin
markers but variable staining with neuroendocrine markers. Sixty-six percent of the tumors (six of nine) were reactive for chromogranin, synaptophysin, or peptide hormones, including four positive for chromogranin and synaptophysin, one positive for synaptophysin and calcitonin, and one positive for calcitonin alone. One tumor that was reactive for chromogranin and synaptophysin also contained calcitonin immunoreactive cells, whereas gastrin-releasing peptide was present in two other tumors that were also positive for chromogranin. Leu 7 was positive in three cases that were reactive for either chromogranin or synaptophysin. Five tumors were estrogen and progesterone receptor-positive. All tumors were positive for bcl-2 and negative for
HER2
/neu. Patients were treated by mastectomy (n = 3) or lumpectomy (n = 6). Eight underwent an axillary dissection that revealed metastatic carcinoma in four patients. Seven patients received adjuvant chemotherapy and four patients received radiation. Two patients also received tamoxifen treatment. Metastases developed in two patients (22%) with a follow-up period of 11 and 32 months. All patients were alive at last follow up 3 to 35 months after treatment. When compared with published reports of mammary small cell carcinoma, our results show that the prognosis in these patients may not be as poor as previously suggested.
...
PMID:Small cell carcinoma of the breast: a clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical study of nine patients. 1139 67
Transformations between epithelial and mesenchymal cells are widespread during normal development and adult disease, and transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1) has been implicated in some of these phenotypic switches. Dysplastic kidneys are a common cause of chronic kidney failure in young children and result from perturbed epithelial-mesenchymal interactions. In this study, we found that components of the TGF-beta1 axis were expressed in these malformations: TGF-beta1 mRNA and protein were up-regulated in dysplastic epithelia and surrounding mesenchymal cells, whereas TGF-beta receptors I and II were expressed in aberrant epithelia. We generated a dysplastic kidney epithelial-like cell line that expressed
cytokeratin
, ZO1, and
MET
, and found that exogenous TGF-beta1 inhibited proliferation and decreased expression of PAX2 and BCL2, molecules characterizing dysplastic tubules in vivo. Furthermore, addition of TGF-beta1 specifically induced morphological changes compatible with a shift to a mesenchymal phenotype, accompanied by loss of ZO1 at cell borders and up-regulation of the mesenchymal markers alpha-smooth muscle actin and fibronectin. The descriptive and functional data presented in this report potentially implicate TGF-beta1 in the pathobiology of dysplastic kidneys and our results provide preliminary evidence that an epithelial-to-mesenchymal phenotypic switch may be implicated in a clinically important developmental aberration.
...
PMID:Potential biological role of transforming growth factor-beta1 in human congenital kidney malformations. 1107 23
A distinctive type of multilayered epithelium (ME) has been described at the neo-squamocolumnar junction and within columnar mucosa in patients with Barrett's esophagus (BE). This epithelium has morphologic and ultrastructural features of both squamous and columnar epithelium. Multilayered epithelium may represent an early or intermediate stage of columnar metaplasia; therefore, we performed this study to determine the morphologic and biologic characteristics of this epithelium and to gain insight into its derivation. Esophageal mucosal biopsies containing ME from 17 patients with BE were evaluated morphologically, stained with a variety of mucin histochemical stains; and also immunostained with antibodies against cytokeratins (CK) 13 (squamous epithelium marker); 14 (basal squamous epithelium marker) 7, 8/18, 19, and 20 (columnar epithelium markers), MIB-1 (proliferation marker); villin (intestinal brush border protein); and TGFalpha,
EGFR
, pS2, and hSP (enteric proliferation/differentiation regulatory peptides). The results were compared with normal esophageal squamous epithelium, normal gastric cardia epithelium, specialized-type intestinal epithelium (BE), and esophageal mucosal and submucosal gland duct epithelium. Multilayered epithelium expressed a pattern of mucin production (neutral mucin, sialomucin, and sulfomucin in 88%, 100%, and 71% of cases, respectively) and
cytokeratin
expression (CK 13 and 19 in the basal "squamoid" cells, CK 7, 8/18, 19, and 20 in the superficial "columnar" cells) similar to that of columnar epithelium in BE, and showed a high capacity for cellular proliferation (Ki-67-positive in 88% of cases) and differentiation (TGFalpha,
EGFR
, pS2 and villin-positive in 100%, 100%, 93%, and 66% of cases, respectively). The mucosal gland duct epithelium showed a similar phenotypic pattern and, in one case, was seen to give rise to ME at the surface of the mucosa. These data provide evidence in support of the hypothesis that ME represents an early or intermediate stage in the development of esophageal columnar metaplasia (BE). The mucosal gland duct epithelium may contain progenitor cells that can give rise to ME.
...
PMID:Phenotypic characteristics of a distinctive multilayered epithelium suggests that it is a precursor in the development of Barrett's esophagus. 1134 67
Stem cell-supported high-dose chemotherapy (HDCT) is currently being evaluated in patients with high-risk primary breast cancer (HRPBC), as defined by extensive axillary lymph node involvement. Conclusive results from randomized studies with sufficient patient numbers and follow-up are pending. We retrospectively analyzed 144 HRPBC patients enrolled in a single-arm trial of tandem HDCT at the University of Heidelberg to evaluate the prognostic value of nodal ratio,
HER2
/neu status, and
cytokeratin
-positive bone marrow cells and to compare the outcomes of these patients with those of a conventionally treated control group of 91 patients matched by nodal ratio, tumor size, combined hormone-receptor status, and
HER2
/neu status. The tandem HDCT regimen consisted of 2 cycles of induction chemotherapy followed by 2 cycles of blood stem cell-supported high-dose ifosfamide, 12 g/m2; carboplatin, 900 mg/M2; and epirubicin, 180 mg/m2. Conventionally treated patients received a regimen containing anthracycline without taxanes (52 patients) or CMF (cyclophosphamide, methotrexate, and 5-flurouracil; 39 patients). With a median follow-up of 3.8 years, disease-free, distant disease-free, and overall survival rates were 62%, 65%, and 84%, respectively. In univariate analysis, besides the hormone receptor status (P = .007),
HER2
/neu overexpression was the strongest predictor of earlier death (P = .017). In multivariate analysis, a nodal ratio of > or =0.8 was found to be the only independent predictor of relapse (relative risk [RR] = 2.09; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.21-3.60; P = .008) and only the absence of hormone receptors was associated with earlier death (RR = 3.59; 95% CI, 1.45-8.86; P = .006). Despite a trend toward later distant relapse after HDCT compared with standard-dose chemotherapy with a median follow-up of 3 years (P = .059), thus far, matched-pair analysis has not demonstrated significantly better survival rates after HDCT in all matched patients (P = .786) or in the subgroups of anthracycline-treated patients and patients with and without overexpression of
HER2
/neu. So far, the follow-up time has been too short to draw definite conclusions; however, patients with a nodal ratio of > or =0.8, receptor-negative tumors, or
HER2
/neu overexpression are at high risk for relapse and death, irrespective of the kind of adjuvant chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Tandem high-dose chemotherapy in high-risk primary breast cancer: a multivariate analysis and a matched-pair comparison with standard-dose chemotherapy. 1146 76
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