Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.24.11 (CD10)
9,792 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Alpha-fetoprotein producing tumors other than hepatoma and germ cell tumors have been widely reported, especially in carcinoma with hepatoid differentiation (hepatoid carcinoma). Hepatoid carcinoma has mostly been found in the stomach, but also occurs in many other organs. A rare case of hepatoid carcinoma of the ovary is presented. A 57-year-old Taiwanese woman was admitted because of lower abdominal pain. Magnetic resonance imaging showed a 10 cm right adnexal mass. She underwent a total hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy with omentectomy. A right ovarian mass measuring 13 x 9 x 8 cm was found. Microscopic examination showed characteristic features for hepatoid carcinoma. Immunohistochemical staining was performed on the tumor using a panel of eight markers (AFP, p-CEA, CD10, Hep Par 1, thyroid transcription factor-1, CK7, CK19 and CK20). This study contradicts the theory that hepatoid carcinoma derives from the surface epithelium of the ovary. Hepatoid carcinoma of the ovary commonly contains a population of clear cells, which may lead to the misdiagnosis of yolk sac tumor or clear cell adenocarcinoma that may arise in many anatomic sites. Histologically, it is also difficult to distinguish hepatoid carcinoma from hepatoid yolk sac tumor. In such cases, demonstration of CD 10, Hep Par 1, membraneous patterns of p-CEA and CK7 would be invaluable for characterizing the tumor as hepatoid carcinoma. More studies are needed to confirm this observation.
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PMID:Hepatoid carcinoma of the ovary: characteristics of its immunoreactivity. A case report. 1559 58

Immunohistochemistry has become an important tool in the diagnosis of ovarian tumors. This article reviews the role of immunohistochemistry in the differential diagnosis of the three main categories of ovarian tumors, with emphasis on recently developed antibodies. In the surface epithelial stromal category the most common problem is its discernment from metastasis. The use of differential cytokeratins, primarily CK7 and CK20, as well as Cdx-2, beta-catenin, and P504S in differentiating between metastatic adenocarcinoma, particularly of colorectal origin, and primary ovarian carcinoma is discussed. Dpc4 may be useful in distinguishing pancreatic from ovarian mucinous carcinomas, because up to 55% of pancreatic carcinomas lack Dpc4 expression, whereas the differential expression of mucin genes may be helpful in distinguishing between primary ovarian mucinous and metastatic tumors. Urothelial markers (thrombomodulin and uroplakin III) and renal cell carcinoma markers (CD10 and renal cell carcinoma marker) can be helpful in the diagnosis of metastatic urothelial and renal cell tumors to the ovary. The roles of inhibin, calretinin, CD99, and other recently described markers in the diagnosis of sex cord-stromal tumors are reviewed. The uses of OCT-4 (POU5F1) (a new highly sensitive and specific marker of dysgerminoma and embryonal carcinoma), CD30, and c-kit are also discussed.
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PMID:Immunohistochemistry as a tool in the differential diagnosis of ovarian tumors: an update. 1562 16

Preclinical studies of prostate cancer (CaP) have employed a genetically engineered mouse model, since there is no naturally occurring CaP in rodents. We have previously reported a new knock-in mouse adenocarcinoma prostate (KIMAP) model. In this study, we demonstrate that the new model possesses a tumor architecture of heterogeneity and multifocality similar to that of human CaP, by utilizing a new compound scoring system to compare with the PSP94 (approved gene symbol Msmb) gene-directed transgenic mouse CaP model (TGMAP). KIMAP mice showed a balanced distribution of tumor extent, which penetrated the prostate gland. Comparative studies on cDNA microarrays demonstrated that KIMAP tumors were upregulated with higher contents of immunoresponse genes, whereas PSP-TGMAP tumors had neuroendocrine (NE) differentiation. The majority of KIMAP mice did not progress to NE CaP, which was observed only at a very late stage and a low frequency. Several tumor marker genes characteristic of human CaP were uniquely identified in KIMAP tumors, including hepsin, maspin, Nkx3.1, CD10 and PSP94 (similar to PSA), etc. The differences between these two CaP models are attributed to the introduction of a single endogenous knock-in mutation. Due to the similarities between human CaP tumors and the PSP-KIMAP tumors, this preclinical model may supplement the current transgenic models to study CaP more accurately.
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PMID:A novel knock-in prostate cancer model demonstrates biology similar to that of human prostate cancer and suitable for preclinical studies. 1572 31

Carcinosarcomas (CS) of the prostate are very uncommon neoplasms defined by the admixture of malignant epithelial and mesenchymal components. We describe here two new examples of CS in two patients aged 66 and 77 years, the first without previous history of prostate adenocarcinoma and the second with a 5-year history of acinar type prostate adenocarcinoma. The diagnosis of CS was made on the cystoprostatectomy specimen in the first case and transurethral resection in the second case. Both biphasic tumours exhibited papillary areas of ductal differentiation and conventional adenocarcinoma in the epithelial component, as well as malignant fibrous histiocytoma and angiosarcomatous areas in the first case and solid, poorly differentiated epithelial areas with neuroendocrine features in the second case. Immunohistochemistry revealed over-expression of c-erb B2 in the papillary epithelial component of both cases, whereas the solid undifferentiated epithelial areas in the second patient expressed c-kit, CD10 and synaptophysin, thus conforming a very undifferentiated cell population. The angiosarcomatous component of the first case expressed CD31 and CD10. The clinical course of the cases was divergent; the first patient is free of disease after radical surgery and adjuvant therapy and the other died 5 months after the diagnosis of CS, having already developed liver metastases.
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PMID:Carcinosarcoma of the prostate: two cases with distinctive morphologic and immunohistochemical findings. 1582 29

A combination of approaches - gene mapping, biomarker analysis, and studies of signal transduction - has helped to clarify the mechanisms of age-related change in mouse immune status and the implications of immune aging for late-life disease. Mapping studies have documented multiple quantitative trait loci (QTL) that influence the levels of age-sensitive T-cell subsets. Some of these QTL have effects that are demonstrable in young-adult mice (8 months of age) and others demonstrable only in middle-aged mice (18 months). Biomarker studies show that T-cell subset levels measured at 8 or 18 months are significant predictors of lifespan for mice dying of lymphoma, fibrosarcoma, mammary adenocarcinoma, or all causes combined. Mice whose immune systems resemble that of young animals, i.e. with low levels of CD4(+) and CD8(+) memory T cells and relatively high levels of CD4(+) T cells, tend to outlive their siblings with the opposite subset pattern. Biochemical analyses show that T cells from aged mice show defects in the activation process within a few minutes of encountering a stimulus and that the defects precede the recognition by the T-cell receptor of agonist peptides on the antigen-presenting cell. Defective assembly of cytoskeletal fibers and hyperglycosylation of T-cell surface glycoproteins contribute to the immunodeficiency state, and indeed treatment with a sialylglycoprotein endopeptidase can restore full function to CD4(+) T cells from aged donors in vitro.
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PMID:T cells in aging mice: genetic, developmental, and biochemical analyses. 1588 47

The cytologic diagnosis of primary conventional renal-cell adenocarcinoma (cRCC) is usually straightforward; however, metastatic cRCC must be distinguished from a variety of neoplasms with clear-cell features. CD10, a cell membrane-associated neutral endopeptidase, and renal-cell carcinoma marker (RCCma), an antibody against human proximal tubular brush border antigen, have recently been shown to be useful in the diagnosis of cRCC. We compared CD10 and RCCma in cell block material from fine-needle aspiration biopsies (FNABs) to assess their utility in the diagnosis of metastatic cRCC, in cytologic specimens. Seven primary and sixteen metastatic cRCCs were immunostained with CD10 and RCCma. The immunoreactivity results were compared with those of a variety of neoplasms originating from other sites such as the liver, lungs, breast, and the gastrointestinal tract. The sensitivity and specificity of CD10 for cRCC were 100% and 59%, respectively. The sensitivity and specificity of RCCma for cRCC were 35% and 100%, respectively. We conclude that CD10 has limited value in confirming the diagnosis of cRCC because of its low specificity. RCCma, when positive, is highly specific for cRCC, but its low sensitivity hinders its diagnostic usefulness.
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PMID:Utility of CD10 and RCCma in the diagnosis of metastatic conventional renal-cell adenocarcinoma by fine-needle aspiration biopsy. 1594 81

Barrett's esophagus is a premalignant condition associated with gastroesophageal reflux disease, and consists of mucosa with a metaplastic columnar epithelium (specialized columnar epithelium). In this study, we examined the expression of mucin and the Ki-67 labeling index (LI) in 15 cases of esophageal Barrett's adenocarcinoma, and clarified the significance of incomplete intestinal metaplasia of Barrett's mucosa as a premalignant lesion. Gastric mucin (MUC5AC, HGM, and/or MUC6) was detected in 93.3% of the adenocarcinomas, while MUC2 and CD10 (markers of intestinal phenotypes) were detected in 73.3% and 46.2%, respectively. The Ki-67 LI was 34.1% in Barrett's adenocarcinoma. In all cases, gastric mucin was found in the non-neoplastic Barrett's mucosa around the adenocarcinoma. MUC2 was detected in 86.7% of proximal non-neoplastic mucosa and 100% of distal non-neoplastic mucosa, while CD10 was found in 20.0% of proximal non-neoplastic mucosa and 40.0% of distal non-neoplastic mucosa of Barrett's adenocarcinoma. In conclusion, Barrett's esophageal mucosa with intestinal metaplasia and a high Ki-67 LI is suggested to be more important as a premalignant lesion, and predominantly found in the proximal rather than distal region of Barrett's esophagus.
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PMID:Mucin expression and proliferating cell index of esophageal Barrett's adenocarcinoma. 1607 42

Gastric cancers with liver metastasis are fatal diseases with rapid progression and poor patient outcome. To date, however, the molecular basis of their growth and metastasis remains essentially unknown, largely because of the presence of few available gastric cancer cell lines established from liver metastasis. In the present study, we developed two novel cultured cell lines (designated GLM-1 and GLM-2) and one transplantable line in nude mice (designated GLM-3) derived from liver metastasis of gastric cancer patients. These GLM cell lines share unique biological features such as differentiation, growth and metastasis. They form moderately differentiated tumors with CD10 positive and MUC2 negative intestinal absorptive phenotype when injected into nude mice. Their growth is stimulated by EGF and TGF-alpha in vitro like other gastric cancer cell lines. However, GLM cells differ from conventional gastric cancer cell lines in their high apoptotic rate, even in the absence of apoptosis inducing stimuli as revealed by Caspase3/7 assay and the TUNEL method. This apoptosis is further enhanced by phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) inhibitor (LY294002), but not by MEK1/2 inhibitor (U0126), indicating the strong dependency of their survival on PI3K/Akt pathway rather than MAPK pathway, the major downstream signaling pathways of EGFR. GLM-1 cells can metastasize to the liver after intrasplenic injection, and GLM-3 cells have spontaneous lung metastatic potential after subcutaneous transplantation, respectively. These results indicate that the GLM series are the first cell lines reflecting the intestinal-type differentiated adenocarcinoma, a major subtype of gastric cancer with liver metastasis. Therefore, they would be excellent models for understanding the mechanism of metastatic growth and the development of a new molecular targeting therapy for gastric cancer with liver metastasis.
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PMID:Establishment and characterization of three novel human gastric cancer cell lines with differentiated intestinal phenotype derived from liver metastasis. 1608 34

Recently, we have many chances of findings of Barrett's esophagus in routine endoscopic examination. It is also reported that we have few frequent findings of typical Barrett's esophagus, long segment Barrett's esophagus (LSBE) which is seen predominantly in Europe and United States, however the frequency of finding of short segment Barrett's esophagus (SSBE) and adenocarcinoma derived from SSBE is gradually increasing in Japan. So it is thought that precise diagnosis of SSBE and the evaluation of potential malignancy of SSBE are needed in the present medical management. The present study has shown the differences of characteristics of mucinous contents and malignant potentials between in SSBE and LSBE by use of biopsy specimen taken by endoscopic procedure. It is well known that Barrett's epithelium is categorized gastric fundic type, junctional type and specialized columnar epithelium, especially Barrett's mucosa is characterized by specialized columnar epithelium, e. g. incomplete epithelial type of intestinal metaplasia. We have set up two characteristic groups, gastric mucin dominant and intestinal mucin dominant by using specific mucin staining for MUC2, MUC5AC, Con A and CD10. In results, we confirmed that 80% of specialized columnar epithelia revealed intestinal mucin dominant in LSBE and 77% revealed gastric mucin dominant as compared with 23%, intestinal mucin dominant. Moreover, we have examined the ability of cell proliferation using Ki67-immunostaining in Barrett's epithelia. It was demonstrated that positive immunoactivity of Ki67 in proliferative zone was shown in 37.5% of gastric mucin dominant and 76.5% of intestinal mucin dominant. The results described above suggested that specialized columnar epithelia with intestinal mucin dominant have a higher potential of malignant transformation. We concluded that the evaluation of characteristics of mucinous contents in specialized columnar epithelia plays an important role in determination of high risk group of carcinogenesis in the case of SSBE.
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PMID:[Histochemical diagnosis of short segment Barrett's esophagus]. 1610 Dec 33

We report three cases of unusual tubal-type endocervical glandular proliferations simulating minimal deviation adenocarcinoma in women with a history of in utero diethylstilbestrol (DES) exposure. The lesions were characterized by haphazard glandular proliferations extending from 3.4 to 6.1 mm into the endocervical stroma and to the margins of excision in all cases. Most of the glands were small to medium-sized and round; some exhibited a moderate degree of cystic dilatation, and occasional glands had curvilinear profiles. The glandular epithelium displayed extensive tubal-type differentiation in all cases. In two cases, the glands lacked cytologic atypia and mitotic activity, and in one case, there was mild to moderate nuclear atypia with occasional mitotic activity. Immunohistochemical studies showed diffuse expression of estrogen and progesterone receptors and essentially no expression of p16 in two cases tested; there was no expression of CD10 in one case that was tested. The Ki-67 proliferation index was zero in one case and 25% in another. Human papillomavirus DNA was not detected by in situ hybridization in one case that was tested. The proliferations lacked features of mucinous and tubo-endometrioid types of minimal deviation adenocarcinoma. The clinicopathologic findings suggest the lesions are benign, and the association with in utero DES exposure raises the possibility that these could be a form of DES-related adenosis.
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PMID:Pseudoinfiltrative tubal metaplasia of the endocervix: a potential form of in utero diethylstilbestrol exposure-related adenosis simulating minimal deviation adenocarcinoma. 1617 88


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