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)

Luminal and myoepithelial cells have been separated from normal adult human breast epithelium using fluorescence activated cell sorting. Their isolation was based on the exclusive expression of two surface antigens, epithelial membrane antigen (EMA) and the common acute lymphoblastic leukaemia antigen (CALLA/CD10/neutral endopeptidase 24.11). Sorted luminal and myoepithelial cells displayed distinctively different morphologies when maintained in monolayer culture, differences which were enhanced by the addition of hydrocortisone, insulin and cholera toxin to the culture medium. The EMA-positive cells formed an attenuated monolayer with indistinct cell boundaries while CALLA-positive cells, by contrast, formed tightly packed arrays of refractile cells. The distribution of the cell type-specific markers cytokeratin 18 (luminal cells) and smooth muscle alpha-actin (myoepithelial cells) indicated that the sorted populations were approximately 98% pure. However, a significant minority (approximately 15%) of sorted luminal cells consistently expressed the basal-cell marker cytokeratin 14 in culture. A marked difference was noted in the proliferative behaviour of the two types of sorted cells, with myoepithelial cells dividing rapidly in response to the humoural additives, in contrast to the luminal cells which proliferated slowly. Both types of sorted cells could be cloned in the presence of feeder layers of mouse fibroblasts. Clones of luminal and myoepithelial cells were also distinctive; all "spread" luminal clones were similar in appearance to each other, although some cellular heterogeneity, including squamous metaplasia, was observed in "compact" myoepithelial clones. Both types were shown to have retained their original surface markers and to exhibit different cytoskeletal antigenic phenotypes when they were re-analysed after a 3-week growth period. Both spread and compact phenotypes were obtained when separately isolated ducts and alveoli were cloned. This detailed characterization of cells isolated from the human breast epithelium by flow cytometry provides the basis for further studies of luminalmyoepithelial interactions and growth responses of purified cell types in vitro.
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PMID:Characterization in vitro of luminal and myoepithelial cells isolated from the human mammary gland by cell sorting. 183 54

Deciduosarcoma is a rare, hormonally dependent neoplasm with features of malignancy, previously reported only in rabbits enrolled in chronic toxicology studies involving estrogens with or without progestins. An exploratory laparotomy was performed on a 6-year-old pet Dutch dwarf rabbit following palpation of a 6-cm-diameter abdominal mass. Grossly, the mass was fleshy and nodular, adhered to but not appearing to originate from the small intestine, with a smaller mass of similar appearance involving the uterus, and an effaced mesenteric lymph node. Histologically, the mass was characterized by spindloid cells and large epithelioid cells with abundant pale eosinophilic vacuolated cytoplasm and an infiltrative pattern of growth. Giant cells with large, bizarre, hyperchromatic nuclei were common. Cells were positive by immunohistochemistry for vimentin and progesterone and estrogen receptors and negative for pancytokeratin (AE1/AE3), cytokeratin 18, desmin, alpha-smooth muscle actin (SMA), and CD10. Based on histologic and immunohistochemical findings, a diagnosis of deciduosarcoma was made.
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PMID:Spontaneous deciduosarcoma in a domestic rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus). 1667 89

Acinar cell carcinoma of pancreatic type rarely occurs at extra-pancreatic sites. We report four primary liver tumors with features of pancreatic acinar cell carcinoma. The patients were two males and two females with a mean age of 65 years (range, 49-72 years). They had upper abdominal pain, weight loss and/or an incidentally discovered liver mass. None had evidence of a primary pancreatic tumor. Grossly, the tumors were large (mean size, 12 cm), well circumscribed and showed a lobulated cut surface. Histologically, they showed a predominantly microacinar pattern, with occasional trabecular, solid and microcystic areas. Cellular atypia and mitotic activity varied within the same tumor and from tumor to tumor. Immunohistochemically, the tumor cells were positive for cytokeratin 18 and at least one acinar cell marker (ie, trypsin, amylase or lipase), but were negative for cytokeratins 7, 19 and 20, HepPar-1, AFP, CD10, carcinoembryonic antigen, CD56, Islet-1 and CDX2. Two tumors stained focally for synaptophysin and chromogranin A. Adjacent liver parenchyma displayed no evidence of cirrhosis. During a mean follow-up of 22 months (range, 3-38 months) no metastases occurred, but one patient developed local recurrence. Our study demonstrates that acinar cell carcinoma of pancreatic type may also originate from the liver and can be readily distinguished from other primary liver neoplasms by its distinct histological and immunohistochemical features. Because our cases were observed within a rather short period, it is likely that this tumor type is so far underrecognized and has been mistaken as a variant of hepatocellular carcinoma, cholangiocarcinoma or any other liver tumor.
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PMID:Pancreatic-type acinar cell carcinoma of the liver: a clinicopathologic study of four patients. 2184 71

Cutaneous metastasis of renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is very rare. The author herein report two cases of RCC with cutaneous metastasis. Case 1: is a 75-year-old man with right lumbago. Imaging modalities including CT and MRI revealed a right renal tumor. Nephrectomy was performed. Pathological diagnosis of the renal tumor was RCC of clear cell type (Fuhrman's grade II). He denied follow-up. Nine years later, he (at the age of 84 years), a neck skin tumor emerged. Clinical diagnosis was hemangioma. Imaging modalities including CT and MRI showed several tumors in both lungs. The resection of the neck tumor was performed. The tumor was composed of clear cell type arranged in a trabecular pattern. Immunohistochemically, the tumor cells were positive for pancytokeratins, cytokeratin 18, CD10, Ki-67 (labeling=13%), but negative for CD34, factor-VIII-related antigen, CEA, EMA, melanosome (HMB45), S100 protein, p53, and HepPar-1. Metastatic RCC was diagnosed. Despite interferon therapy, he died of 6 months after the second admission. Case 2 is a 66-year-old man with gross hematuria. Imaging modalities revealed left renal tumor. A nephrectomy was performed. The pathological diagnosis was RCC of clear cell type (grade II). The tumor was invasive into the renal pelvis. He was treated by chemoradiation, but metastases of lungs, skin (thigh), and lib emerged, and died of cachexia 9 months after the admission. Necropsy of the skin tumor was performed. The skin tumor was composed of clear cells arranged in a trabecular pattern. Immunohistochemically, the tumor cells were positive for pancytokeratins (AE1/3, CAM5.2), CD10, p53, and Ki-67 (labeling=20%), but negative for CD34, factor-VIII-related antigen, CEA, melanosome (HMB45), S100 protein, and HepPar-1. A diagnosis of RCC (grade II) was diagnosed.
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PMID:Cutaneous metastasis of renal cell carcinoma: a report of two cases. 2240 81

Increasing evidence indicates that invasive properties of breast cancers rely on gain of mesenchymal and stem features, which has suggested that the dual targeting of these phenotypes may represent an appealing therapeutic strategy. It is known that the fraction of stem cells can be enriched by culturing breast cancer cells as mammospheres (MS), but whether these pro-stem conditions favor also the expansion of cells provided of mesenchymal features is still undefined. In the attempt to shed light on this issue, we compared the phenotypes of a panel of 10 breast cancer cell lines representative of distinct subtypes (luminal, HER2-positive, basal-like and claudin-low), grown in adherent conditions and as mammospheres. Under MS-proficient conditions, the increment in the fraction of stem-like cells was associated to upregulation of the mesenchymal marker Vimentin and downregulation of the epithelial markers expressed by luminal cells (E-cadherin, KRT18, KRT19, ESR1). Luminal cells tended also to upregulate the myoepithelial marker CD10. Taken together, our data indicate that MS-proficient conditions do favor mesenchymal/myoepithelial features, and indicate that the use of mammospheres as an in vitro tumor model may efficiently allow the exploitation of therapeutic approaches aimed at targeting aggressive tumors that have undergone epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition
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PMID:Mesenchymal traits are selected along with stem features in breast cancer cells grown as mammospheres. 2322 64

A 6-year-old female rabbit was presented to a veterinary clinic, and the result of ultrasound examination suggested a tumor in the uterine tube. Subsequently, both ovaries and uterus were surgically removed. In gross, a single large cyst in the right ovary and enlargement of the left uterine tube were observed. Histological examination revealed that the cyst had developed in the hilus of the ovary and was lined by single-layered cuboidal cells. In the left uterine tube, a tumor composed of epithelial cells arranged in tubular structures and pleomorphic cells between the tubular structures was observed. Immunohistochemically, the epithelial cells of the cyst were positive for pan-cytokeratin, cytokeratin 18, CD10, E-cadherin, calretinin and estrogen receptor; the tumor cells of the left uterine tube were positive for pan-cytokeratin, cytokeratin 18, E-cadherin, vimentin, calretinin and estrogen receptor. From these results, the cyst was diagnosed as cystic rete ovarii, and the tumor was diagnosed as adenoma of the uterine tube. This case is the first to demonstrate cystic rete ovarii and uterine tube adenoma in rabbits.
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PMID:Cystic rete ovarii and uterine tube adenoma in a rabbit. 2457 33