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)

Multilocular renal cyst is an uncommon lesion of uncertain pathogenesis seen in children and adults. We report the immunohistochemical and lectin-binding profiles of three MRC occurring in adults. All cases had strong and uniform cytoplasmic staining of lining epithelial cells for keratin and binding sites for arachis hypogaea lectin, similar to that seen for the distal convoluted tubules or collecting ducts in normal kidney. However, we found variable expression of other distal nephron markers, including epithelial membrane antigen and Ber-EP4. Furthermore, lining cells in some lesions coexpressed proximal nephron markers such as alpha-1-antitrypsin and lysozyme, as well as binding sites for lotus tetragonolobus lectin. Immunostaining for type IV (basement membrane) collagen demonstrated a continuous subepithelial basement membrane zone and basal laminae surrounding desmin-positive stromal cells. Areas of active collagen synthesis and stromal procollagen deposition were visualized within the interlocular septae using a monoclonal antibody to type I procollagen. Significant proliferative activity was not detected in the lining epithelium or stroma using the anti-proliferating cell nuclear antigen. In conclusion, MRC show aberrant tubular epithelial glycoprotein and glycoconjugate expression, low proliferative activity, and associated activation of interlocular stromal cells.
...
PMID:Multilocular renal cyst. Immunohistochemical and lectin-binding study. 137 21

A total of 14 cases of clear cell carcinoma of salivary glands were evaluated by immunohistochemical methods using monoclonal antibodies to cytokeratin (K1.1 and K8.12), vimentin, S-100 alpha and beta subunits, neuron-specific enolase (NSE), glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), MAM-3 and MAM-6 antigens and proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), as well as polyclonal antibodies to lysozyme (Ly), lactoferrin (la) and Alpha-1-antichymotrypsin (alpha 1-Ach). Histopathologically, the carcinoma was characterized by round or polygonal tumor cells with cytoplasm that does not stain with hematoxylin and eosin, nuclei with little pleomorphism and few or no mitotic figures, and growing in solid sheets, small nests or cords with collagenous stroma. Cytokeratin KL1 and K8.12 was present in few tumor cells with almost negligible to strong reaction in all cases, vimentin in 6, GFAP in 5 cases with multiple-expression of cytokeratin K8.12, vimentin and GFAP in 5 cases. S-100 protein immunoreactivity was the most prominent feature with more intense reaction of S-100 beta than S-100 alpha subunit. NSE reactivity was seen in 6 cases. Ly, La, a1-ch, MAM-3 and MAM-6 antigens were localized in clear cells with various reaction intensities. The authors conclude that the clear tumor cells in clear cell carcinoma of salivary glands are not myoepithelial in origin but epithelial or neuroectodermal/neural crest in origin, showing ductal differentiation at the immunohistochemical level.
...
PMID:Clear cell carcinoma of salivary glands: immunohistochemical evaluation of clear tumor cells. 752 Nov 53

The present study was undertaken to elucidate the relationship between the distribution of potentially proliferative tumor cells and the organoid differentiation of tumor cells in gastric carcinomas. One hundred four specimens of surgically removed human gastric carcinomas, including 68 and 36 specimens of early and advanced carcinomas, respectively, were studied by using a battery of histochemical techniques. Serial 3-microns thick paraffin sections were stained by galactose oxidase-cold thionine Schiff-paradoxical concanavalin A staining (GOCTS-PCS), or were immunostained for pepsinogen types I and II, lysozyme, and proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA). In addition, to identify proliferative tumor cells parts of fresh carcinoma tissues were incubated in a solution containing bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU), embedded in paraffin, and immunostained for BrdU. The results indicated that in intramucosal carcinoma tissues showing organoid differentiation the proliferative tumor cells were located predominantly between the covering epithelial cell type tumor cells and the glandular mucous cell type tumor cells, and the disturbance in the distribution of proliferative cells coincided with the submucosal invasion.
...
PMID:Proliferative markers in gastric carcinoma and organoid differentiation. 762 43

The immunophenotype and proliferation fraction have been investigated in 26 cases of Langerhans' cell histiocytosis (LCH). In all cases LCH cells were positive for S-100 protein, CD1a, or both. In most cases LCH cells expressed the macrophage-associated marker CD68 and in two cases they contained lysozyme. Expression of both cytoplasmic CD2 and CD3 was observed in cryostat sections. An unexpected finding was the presence of placental alkaline phosphatase in LCH cells. Langerhans' cells in normal skin were negative for both CD2 and CD3, but a proportion contained placental alkaline phosphatase. In four cases of Rosai-Dorfman disease the histiocytic cells, which share certain immunophenotypic properties with Langerhans' cells, also were positive for placental alkaline phosphatase. A significant proportion of LCH cells stained positively with the antibody to proliferating cell nuclear antigen and also with the proliferation marker Ki-S1. A good correlation between the percentage of Ki-67-positive and proliferating cell nuclear antigen- and Ki-S1-positive cells, respectively, was observed. Thus, in comparison with their putative precursors, LCH cells have an aberrant phenotype and are proliferating locally. This might suggest that LCH is a neoplastic rather than a reactive process.
...
PMID:Langerhans' cell histiocytosis (histiocytosis X): immunophenotype and growth fraction. 769 Jul 35

To date, the rare primary histiocytoses of the skin are diagnosed definitively on the basis of the clinical symptoms, H&E-stained sections, and demonstration of CD1 positivity in frozen sections and of Birbeck granules on electron microscopy. The improvement and analysis of antibodies with the ability to react in paraffin tissue allow retrospective evaluation and classification of these disorders. The antibodies for S-100-protein, peanut agglutinin (PNA) and PCNA (proliferating cell nuclear antigen) have been advocated for differentiation of the specific cells of Langerhans cell histiocytosis (LCH) from other histiocytic cell systems. To date the non-Langerhans cell histiocytoses (non-LCH) have no common ultrastructural and immunohistochemical characteristics. The infiltrate is made up of multiple cell populations, which are of significance for the cellular pathobiology (subtypes of monocytes/macrophages and dendritic cells). The number and distribution of the different monocyte/macrophages and dendritic cells and their ability to react with immunohistochemical markers in paraffin tissue can be completely different in different clinical entities. The antibodies against factor XIIIa (shown on xanthoma disseminatum) and the monoclonal antibody Ki-M1P (shown on juvenile xanthogranuloma) seem to be valuable in discrimination between LCH and non-LCH. Both markers show a positive staining pattern with the characteristic large macrophages. In juvenile xanthogranuloma, the foam cells and giant cells express Ki-M1P, KP1 and anti-cathepsin B. Other monocyte/macrophage markers with the ability to react in paraffin tissue, such as Mac387, lysozyme, alpha 1-antitrypsin and Leu-M1 (Anti-CD 15), in contrast, did not show a typical staining pattern with the characteristic large macrophages dominating the histological picture.
...
PMID:[Possibilities and limits of paraffin-embedded cell markers in diagnosis of primary cutaneous histiocytosis]. 775 39

The authors have previously shown that duodenal adenomas in familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) patients typically reveal abundant cells with endocrine differentiation (ED), Paneth differentiation (PD), and goblet cell differentiation (GD). However, the biological significance and proliferative potential of these cells is unknown. To study the proliferative properties of cells with ED, PD, or GD in FAP-associated duodenal adenomas, the authors used a double-labeling immunohistochemical technique to detect simultaneously the presence of proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), and either chromogranin or lysozyme in individual neoplastic cells. Adenomatous cells with GD were identified morphologically and also evaluated for the degree of PCNA expression by immunohistochemistry. Duodenal adenomas and the adjacent nonadenomatous epithelium from 10 FAP patients were studied. Cells with ED, PD, and GD were present in all adenomas, and constituted 14.1%, 11.6%, and 17.7% of adenomatous cells, respectively. The overall proliferative index of nondifferentiated adenomatous cells was 33.3%, which was similar to the proliferative index obtained for adenomatous cells with GD (31.2%) and nonadenomatous crypt goblet cells (34.9%). In contrast, adenomatous cells with ED and PD showed a significant decrease in their proliferative potential (P < .001). Only 6.0% and 7.3% of cells with ED and PD, respectively, were proliferative. Nonadenomatous crypt endocrine and Paneth cells showed no proliferative potential (proliferative index 0%). These results suggest that, in the process of proliferation and differentiation, specific subpopulations of adenomatous cells attempt to recapitulate the biological characteristics of their normal counterparts in the small intestinal crypts. Adenomatous cells with ED and PD are hypoproliferative, a finding that is consistent with their differentiated phenotype and suggests that these cells may not participate as actively in the growth of these lesions.
...
PMID:Proliferative characteristics of differentiated cells in familial adenomatous polyposis-associated duodenal adenomas. 854 13

Giant cell tumor of the bone is usually located within the epiphysis of a long bone, the majority of the lesions occurring in the third and fourth decades of life. We report an unusual case of giant cell tumor (GCT) arising in the parietal skull bone of a 9-year-old girl. The tumor exhibited histologic findings typical for GCT, with conspicuous intravascular giant cells. Based on microscopic features, not only conditions like aneurysmal bone cyst or bone changes associated with hyperparathyroidism but also tumors such as chondroblastoma or osteosarcoma had to be considered. Immunohistochemistry revealed strong reactivity of the tumor giant cells and normal bone osteoclasts with CD68 but not Mac-387; tumor stromal cells were uniformly negative for both. The stromal cells exhibited two immunohistochemically distinct phenotypes. One, involving 50-80% of the tumor cells, exhibited negative lysozyme staining with positivity of proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) in about 30% of the nuclei. The other showed reactivity with lysozyme but negative PCNA staining. Immunohistochemistry thus helped to distinguish chondroblastoma and osteosarcoma, in which lysozyme positivity would reside in macrophages but not within stromal cells. Instead, chondroblastoma would exhibit protein S-100 positivity in the tumor cells. The biological behavior of GCT is difficult to predict based on morphology alone, although the malignant potential seems to rest in the stromal cells rather than the giant cells. Specifically, in reported cases, the intravascular occurrence of giant cells in GCT is not associated with an increased incidence of metastasis.
...
PMID:Giant cell tumor in the skull of a 9-year-old child: immunohistochemistry to confirm a diagnosis rare for age and site. 859 62

We present a case of proliferative fasciitis arising adjacent to an operative scar of the right lower leg of a patient with chronic lymphatic leukemia, diabetes mellitus, and multiple subcutaneous angiolipomas. A 61-year old man had a hard mass in his right lower leg that had rapidly increased in size in the past 10 days. The mass was microscopically composed of a dense proliferation of spindle cells forming interlacing fascicles admixed with an inflammatory infiltrate of lymphocytes and eosionphils, focal hemorrhage, and myxomatous change as typically seen in nodular fasciitis as well as many characteristic ganglion cell-like giant cells. Immunohistochemically, most of the spindle-shaped cells were positive for vimentin and alpha-actin, whereas the ganglion cell-like giant cells were positive for vimentin and negative for alpha-actin and lysozyme. We suggest that the main component cells of proliferative fasciitis are fibroblastic in nature, many of which are myofibroblasts in large part, whereas the ganglion cell-like giant cells are related more closely to fibroblasts rather than histiocytes or pericytes. Additionally, proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) stain revealed that many of the fibroblastic cells showed high proliferative activity, especially in the hypercellular areas, although there was no significant difference in PCNA staining between the focus traumatized by the needle biopsy and the nontraumatized areas.
...
PMID:Proliferative fasciitis. Report of a case with histopathologic and immunohistochemical studies. 926 76

To study the secretory products and the proliferation of cells of the human respiratory surface epithelium, we established a miniorgan-culture system of bronchial tissue. Biopsies of large airways were grown on agar-coated dishes immersed in a serum-enriched medium. As determined by light and transmission electron microscopy, between 1 and 3 weeks, the organ cultures were covered by a differentiated epithelium consisting of secretory, ciliated, and basal cells. Immunohistochemistry, using antibodies to mucin and lysozyme, and lectin histochemistry revealed both mucous and serous secretory cells in the epithelium. Cell proliferation was studied in situ using antibodies to proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) and Ki-67. Whereas at the time of explantation the proliferation was low (2.5+/-1.7% of the epithelial cells were PCNA-positive, 1.7+/-0.6 were Ki-67-positive), at 24 h of cultivation, 30.4+/-5.1% or 25.2+/-4.9% of the epithelial cells were labeled with antibodies to PCNA or Ki-67. After 7 days, the number of dividing cells was low again. The results show that the organ-culture system of human respiratory surface epithelium produces a differentiated epithelium that is useful in the study of secretory processes, differentiation, and proliferation.
...
PMID:Secretory cell types and cell proliferation of human bronchial epithelial cells in an organ-culture system. 971 48

The main components of an unusual form of lung tumor were osteoclast-like multinucleated giant cells and mononuclear stromal cells. Besides, scattered islands of moderately differentiated squamous cells also appeared. Both the mononuclear and the osteoclast-like giant cells reacted with antibodies against CD68 and vimentin, but did not react with antibodies against cytokeratin, EMA and CEA, or lysozyme and a-1-antitrypsin. The p53 and PCNA antigens were positive only in mononuclear cells and not the osteoclast-like giant cells, suggesting that mononuclear cells represent proliferating elements with histiocytic differentiation while osteoclast-like giant cells are stromal, presumably reactive components of the tumor.
...
PMID:Osteoclastoma-like Giant Cell Tumor of the Lung. 1117 92


1 2 3 Next >>