Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.2.1.17 (lysozyme)
21,489 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Immunohistochemical examinations were performed using five kinds of histiocytic markers [S100 protein, lysozyme, non-specific cross reacting antigen with carcinoembryonic antigen (NCA), alpha 1-antichymotrypsin (alpha 1-ACT) and alpha 1-antitrypsin (alpha 1-AT)] in biopsied tissues from histiocytosis X, juvenile xanthogranuloma, xanthoma tuberosum, xanthoma disseminatum, reticulohistiocytic granuloma and multicentric reticulohistiocytoma, all of which have been classified as histiocytic proliferative disorders. Our results suggested that xanthomatous lesions of the skin to be composed of the histiocytic proliferation of two different cell lineages, i.e. S100+lyso-NCA- T-zone histiocytes and S100-lyso+NCA+ tissue macrophages. Only lesions of histiocytosis X were composed of the former cells. It is suggested that these markers will be useful in determining the delineation of the histiocytic system on the basis of functional heterogeneity.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical study on cutaneous histioproliferative lesions. 282 48

Fifty-seven cases of juvenile xanthogranuloma that fulfilled the classic description of histologic findings of the disease were analyzed clinicopathologically and immunohistochemically. Two forms could be distinguished: 47 cases of the infantile form and 10 of the adolescent and young adult form. The infantile lesion was found at birth in 8 patients (17%), and was noted within 1 year after birth in 33 (70%). Twenty-two had multiple lesions and five of the six for whom follow-up was feasible had spontaneous involution. About half of the lesions were located on the head and neck, 30% on the trunk, and 20% on the extremities. All six adolescents had a solitary tumor located in the head and neck region. Comparison of the latter form with reticulohistiocytoma and cutaneous fibrous histiocytoma was established from a differential point of view. Immunohistochemically, most lesions of juvenile xanthogranuloma displayed a positive reaction for lysozyme and alpha-1-antichymotrypsin and were negative for S-100 protein, thereby suggesting that the essential constituents of this lesion would derive from the mononuclear phagocyte system.
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PMID:Juvenile xanthogranuloma. Clinicopathologic analysis and immunohistochemical study of 57 patients. 393

The clinicopathological and immunohistochemical features of four patients with systemic multicentric reticulohistiocytosis (MR) were compared with five cases of solitary and one case of multiple reticulohistiocytoma (RH), which were confined to the skin only. The MR cases mostly affected the limbs of older women, while RH affected young male adults without preference to site. Characteristically, both entities consisted of oncocytic mononuclear histiocytes (with granular eosinophilic cytoplasm similar to oncocytic thyroid cells) and multinucleated histiocytes with a ground-glass appearance, which appeared to be much larger (> 200 microns) and bizarre in cases of RH compared with cases of MR (50-100 microns). In RH a variable number of vacuolated, spindle-shaped, and xanthomatized mononuclear histiocytes were also present. Immunohistochemical profiles showed positivity of mononuclear histiocytes with HHF35, factor XIIIa, and LN3 (HLA-DR), with a variable number of multinucleated histiocytes in RH showing binding with peanut agglutinin. In mono- and multinucleated histiocytes in both entities macrophage markers KP1 (CD68), KiM1P, HAM56, lysozyme, and alpha 1-antitrypsin were positive. However, macrophage markers MAC387 (L1 antigen) and Leu-M1 (CD15) were negative. Vimentin was universally positive in both conditions, with all other markers (S100, desmin, smooth muscle-specific actin, and QBEnd 10 [CD34]) negative. This study shows that histology supplemented by immunocytochemistry delineates MR from RH and immunohistochemical profiles indicate a cell lineage relationship between RH and adult xanthogranuloma.
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PMID:Reticulohistiocytoma and multicentric reticulohistiocytosis. Histopathologic and immunophenotypic distinct entities. 859 81

A 30-year-old female complained of a surface-eroded solitary nodule on the right thigh. Histologically, the dermal lesion consisted of uniform-sized polygonal cells with eosinophilic, 'ground glass' cytoplasm. Mitoses were infrequent. Under the histopathologic diagnosis of amelanotic melanoma, wide resection of the skin and dissection of the inguinal lymph nodes were performed. The subcutaneous tissue and a lymph node showed nodular proliferation of histiocytoid cells, in association with hemosiderin-laden multinucleated giant cells. The mononuclear cells were immunoreactive for factor XIIIa, while the multinucleated cells were positive for CD68, lysozyme and HLA-DR. In the lymph node tissue, a considerable number of mononuclear cells positive for CD68 were noted. CD34, alpha-smooth muscle actin, desmin and HMB45 were negative. Ultrastructurally, the mononuclear cells were rich in 100 nm vesicles and 180-350 nm lysosome-like granules. Interdigitation of the plasma membranes was seen in the multinucleated cells. The patient did not complain of joint symptoms, and has been disease-free for 5 years. The histologic and immunohistochemical features are consistent with so-called 'reticulohistiocytoma', though the site of histiocytic growth was unusual.
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PMID:Reticulohistiocytoma involving the skin, subcutaneous tissue and a regional lymph node. 887 11

Reticulohistiocytoma and multicentric reticulohistiocytosis are designations for uncommon, incompletely characterized histiocytic proliferations of the skin or soft tissues. In this study, we analyzed a uniform group of 44 lesions composed of epithelioid histiocytes, comprising a subset of lesions originally designated as reticulohistiocytoma, and propose designating them as "solitary epithelioid histiocytoma" (SEH), in line with the recently published classification proposal for histiocytic disorders. There were 26 males and 18 females with a median age of 35 years (range, 2.5-74 years). All patients had a superficial, circumscribed, mildly elevated, solitary lesion (size range, 1.5-11 mm; median, 4 mm), located in the trunk wall (n = 16), lower extremity (n = 12), head and neck (n = 8, including 2 in the oral cavity), upper extremity (n = 6), penis (n = 1), and an unspecified site (n = 1). Histologically, the lesions typically involved upper and mid-dermis and were not ulcerated. They were composed of large epithelioid histiocytes with a varying number of lymphocytes and neutrophils. The histiocytes had abundant, typically densely eosinophilic, cytoplasm and mostly mild, if any, nuclear atypia. Multinucleated forms with randomly oriented nuclei were also present. The histiocytes had low mitotic activity (range, 0-4 mitoses per 10 wide HPFs; median, 1 mitosis per 10 HPFs). The lesions contained varying numbers of CD3-positive T cells, whereas B lymphocytes, plasma cells, eosinophils, and mast cells were scant, if present at all. Immunohistochemically, the epithelioid histiocytes were positive for CD163, CD68, lysozyme (variably), and vimentin. They often had focal nuclear immunoreactivity for microphthalmia transcription factor, and they sometimes had focal reactivity for Factor XIIIa and S-100 protein. Membrane positivity for CD31, CD43, and CD45 was variable. The epithelioid histiocytes were consistently negative for CD3, CD20, CD30, HMB45, and keratins. All 12 patients with follow-up information had an uneventful clinical course with no recurrences (median, 13 years). SEH is a benign, probably reactive, histiocytic proliferation of unknown etiology. It needs to be distinguished from Rosai-Dorfman disease, juvenile xanthogranuloma, a variety of granulomatous conditions, and some malignant neoplasms, including histiocytic sarcoma, melanoma, and epithelioid sarcoma.
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PMID:Reticulohistiocytoma (solitary epithelioid histiocytoma): a clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical study of 44 cases. 1662