Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: HUMANGGP:012675 (
S100
)
6,012
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A case of multicentric reticulohistiocytosis is presented with extensive immunohistochemical study of the infiltrate in both paraffin and cryostat sections.
Factor XIIIa
dermal dendrocyte marker was demonstrated in the cytoplasm of histiocytes, which has not been reported previously in this disease. In addition, the
S100
protein stained positive. This immunophenotyping study suggests a dermal dendrocyte lineage with an unusual expression of
S100
protein.
...
PMID:Multicentric reticulohistiocytosis. Immunohistological and ultrastructural study: a pathology of dendritic cell lineage. 141 60
A case study of sinus histiocytosis of Rosai-Dorfman (SH) clinically limited to the skin is presented with immunohistochemical study of the infiltrate, in both paraffin and cryostat sections.
Factor XIIIa
, a dendrocyte marker, was demonstrated in the cytoplasm of histiocytes. This feature had not been previously reported in this disease. In addition, the cells expressed
S100
protein, CD4, CD1a, CD68, and CD11c. This immunophenotyping study suggests that SH could affect the antigen-presenting activity of
Factor XIIIa
cells, i.e., the skin dermal dendrocyte.
...
PMID:Sinus histiocytosis (Rosai-Dorfman disease) clinically limited to the skin. An immunohistochemical and ultrastructural study. 769 80
This paper presents a description of the patterns of distribution of accessory cells in helicobacter gastritis and low-grade gastric MALT lymphomas. The use of gastric resection specimens afforded abundant, well-orientated lymphoid tissue. Fifteen cases were selected from patients with MALT lymphomas, three with gastritis alone, and six histologically normal controls. A panel of antibodies working in paraffin-embedded tissue, identifying differing accessory cells, was used. These comprised antibodies to HLA class II (WR18), acid cysteine proteinase inhibitor (ACPI), CD68 (PGM1),
Factor XIIIa
,
S100
protein, CD23 (BU38), CD106 (V-CAM1), CD55 (BRIC 128), and CD21 (1F8). CD68-positive macrophages in the gastritis cases were abundant in the superficial mucosa.
Factor XIIIa
also identified dendritic cells at deeper sites but these were absent from both the acquired and the neoplastic lymphoid tissue. Antibodies to both
S100
protein and ACPI stained dendritic cells localized to areas within and adjacent to the lymphoid tissue only.
S100
protein-positive cells were concentrated in close contact with glandular epithelium immediately above the germinal centres, while ACPI-positive dendritic cells were identified, especially around the more blastic reactive follicles, in the intervening space between the germinal centres and the overlying epithelium. Similar patterns of organization were also seen in the areas of mucosal lymphoma. The follicular dendritic markers revealed overlapping but distinct sub-populations within the germinal centres which appeared to alter depending on the activity of the germinal centres. While both ACPI and CD55 stained the germinal centre dendritic reticulum cell networks only, CD21 and CD106 also stained the mantle dendritic cells. The proportion staining with CD23, which stains dendritic reticulum cells within the centrocyte-rich areas of the germinal centres only, was greatest in the more quiescent germinal centres. Similar patterns of staining were also seen in germinal centres within the gastric MALT lymphomas. It is proposed that the sub-populations of dendritic cells staining with
S100
protein and ACPI may facilitate helicobacter antigen delivery to the germinal centres. The follicular dendritic cells then promote a sustained B-cell response to the luminal pathogen.
...
PMID:A study of accessory cells in the acquired lymphoid tissue of helicobacter gastritis. 894 10
We present an immunohistochemical study of accessory cells in acute appendicitis and ulcerative colitis (UC). By comparing these two diseases, it is possible to distinguish between changes associated with inflammatory bowel disease and those resulting from nonspecific intestinal inflammation. Nine total colectomy specimens from patients with UC, in which the appendix was also involved, were compared with nine cases of acute appendicitis. Accessory cells were stained for CD68 (PGMI), ACPI (acid cysteine proteinase inhibitor),
S100
protein, MAC387 (calgranulin), CD1a, factor XIIIa, and WR18 (HLA class II). In ulcerative colitis, but not acute appendicitis, there was extension of a network of
S100
positive dendritic cells into the crptal mucosa, and these
S100
-positive dendritic cells were closely aligned with the epithelium. The epithelium in UC, but not in acute appendicitis, showed intense upregulation of HLA class II, and this was particularly marked at the crypt bases. Dendritic, MAC387-positive cells were seen only in UC. In both diseases there were abundant ACPI-positive accessory cells in the cryptal areas, a population normally restricted to the dome areas.
Factor XIIIa
- and PGM1-positive cells, although abundant in both conditions, had distributions similar to those that we had previously shown in normal controls. No CD1a-positive cells were identified in either UC or acute appendicitis. We hypothesize that
S100
identifies a subpopulation of activated macrophages. The concentration of this subpopulation, in close contact with the epithelium, which also shows altered expression of HLA class II antigens, suggests that a component of the immune response is targeting this area in UC. In addition, we also suggest that the identification of MAC387-positive dendritic cells in UC reflects increased macrophage turnover in inflammatory bowel disease.
...
PMID:The accessory cell populations in ulcerative colitis: a comparison between the colon and appendix in colitis and acute appendicitis. 904 93
Seventeen cases of superficial angiomyxoma (cutaneous myxoma) of the genital region are reported. Thirteen patients were female (age range: 15-33 years; mean: 21 years) and four were male (age range: 18-55 years; mean: 39 years). The sites of involvement in females were the labium majus or labium, not otherwise specified (n = 6), vulva (n = 4), groin (n = 2), and mons pubis (n = 1). All lesions in male patients involved the scrotum. The tumors were present from 2 months to 4 years before resection and ranged from 0.9 to 6 centimeters in maximal dimension; 10 tumors were 3 centimeters or less in size. The predominant reason for seeking medical attention was a slow growing painless mass. All lesions were locally excised. Follow-up was obtained for 9 patients with a mean and median follow-up interval of 135 and 95 months, respectively. A recurrence developed in three patients at 8 months, 7 years 11 months, and 20 years. No patient has been shown to have Carney's complex. The tumors were immunoreactive for vimentin (11/11), CD34 (11/11), muscle-specific actin (8/12), smooth muscle actin (9/11),
S100
protein (5/13), and
Factor XIIIa
(5/9). No immunoreactivity was present for desmin (DE-R- 11), glial fibrillary acidic protein, estrogen receptor or progesterone receptor. Superficial angiomyxomas are probably derived from fibroblast-like cells capable of antigen modulation.
...
PMID:Superficial angiomyxoma (cutaneous myxoma): a clinicopathologic study of 17 cases arising in the genital region. 942 Oct 71
Cutaneous hypersensitivity reactions can develop against antigens delivered through the epidermis (contact dermatitis) or through the blood vessels (e.g., drug eruptions). On routine histology alone, it is not always possible to determine the route of the antigen. Langerhans cells (LC) are the main antigen-presenting cells in contact dermatitis. Dermal dendrocytes (DC) are antigen-presenting cells and may be involved in dermal reactions. We tested the hypothesis that there is a difference between dermatitis due to external and internal antigen sources with regard to the number or function of LC and DC. In 85 cases of dermatitis, numbers of
S100
and HLA-DR reactive cells per linear millimetre of epidermis were counted. The amount of epidermal spongiosis was evaluated qualitatively. In 35 cases, the number of DC per mm2 (as defined by
Factor XIIIa
expression) was evaluated. The patients were then divided into two groups based on whether the final clinical evaluation considered the dermatitis to be secondary to an external (35 cases) or internal antigen (50 cases). Dermatitis due to external antigens had significantly more LC/mm and more frequent HLA-DR expression than dermatitis due to internal antigens, mean +/- SEM; 21.2+/-2.04 vs. 9.1+/-1.02 (p<0.00001) and 16.3+/-2.49 vs. 6.0+/-0.92 (p=0.0001), respectively. Spongiosis was more marked in external antigen cases. DC were more numerous in internal than in external antigen cases, but the differences were not statistically significant. In our model, determination of numbers of LC/mm is the variable with the highest power to discriminate between internal and internal sources. Quantification of HLA-DR+ LC and degree of spongiosis provide little additional discriminatory power.
...
PMID:Quantitative immunohistochemical differences in Langerhans cells in dermatitis due to internal versus external antigen sources. 969 19
Hereditary progressive mucinous histiocytosis is a rare autosomal dominant non-Langerhans cell histiocytosis. We describe a sporadic case of this syndrome in a 64-year-old woman who had multiple dark-red dome-shaped papulonodules located mainly on the back of her hands, forearms and thighs. Light microscopy revealed a circumscribed upper dermal aggregate of ovoid or spindle-shaped histiocytes with abundant mucin deposition. Iron deposits and numerous mast cells were scattered throughout the tumour but giant cells were rare. Electron microscopy revealed a high number of zebra bodies and myeloid bodies in the cytoplasm of the histiocytes. Immunohistochemistry showed positive labelling with alpha-1 antitrypsin,
Factor XIIIa
and CD68, while CD1a, CD34 and
S100
protein were negative. The differential diagnosis of histiocytic syndromes is discussed.
...
PMID:A sporadic case of progressive mucinous histiocytosis. 1065 9
S100
proteins are a family of 10-14 kDa EF-hand-containing calcium binding proteins that function to transmit calcium-dependent cell regulatory signals.
S100
proteins have no intrinsic enzyme activity but bind in a calcium-dependent manner to target proteins to modulate target protein function. Transglutaminases are enzymes that catalyze the formation of covalent epsilon-(gamma-glutamyl)lysine bonds between protein-bound glutamine and lysine residues. In the present study we show that
transglutaminase
-dependent covalent modification is a property shared by several
S100
proteins and that both type I and type II transglutaminases can modify
S100
proteins. We further show that the reactive regions are at the solvent-exposed amino- and carboxyl-terminal ends of the protein, regions that specify
S100
protein function. We suggest that
transglutaminase
-dependent modification is a general mechanism designed to regulate
S100
protein function.
...
PMID:S100A7, S100A10, and S100A11 are transglutaminase substrates. 1125 32
The non-Langerhans histiocytoses, a nosologic category to which juvenile xanthogranuoma (JXG) belongs, represent a heterogenous collection of disorders related to the monocyte/macrophage lineage. The dermal dendrocyte was previously proposed as the cell of origin for JXG on the basis of
Factor XIIIa
reactivity, a suggestion that does not fully explain the occasional xanthogranulomatous proliferations localizing exclusively to extracutaneous sites. This study applies a panel of recently developed immunohistochemical markers to JXGs and relates the phenotype of this process to new concepts of monocyte/dendritic cell ontogeny. Twenty-seven JXG, ten dermatofibromas (DF), and ten age-matched normal skin specimens were stained using standard immunohistochemistry methods, and all JXGs were fascin+ and CD68+, although 26 of 27 were reactive for HLA-DR, 25 of 27 for
Factor XIIIa
, 25 of 27 for LCA, 21of 27 for CD4, and 8 of 27 for polyclonal s100. Six of those eight polyclonal S100+ cases were also reactive for monoclonal
S100
. None of those cases was reactive for CD1a, CD3, CD21, CD34, or CD35. Eight of ten dermatofibromas were FXIIIa+; all were negative for HLA-DR, LCA, CD4, and polyclonal s100. In controls, fascin+ dendritic cells were present but did not stain for
Factor XIIIa
,
S100
, or CD4. Based on the morphologic and phenotypic overlap of the lesional cells in JXGs and plasmacytoid monocytes, it would appear that the plasmacytoid monocyte might be considered the putative normal counterpart of the major cellular population of JXGs, a proposal that helps explain the extra-cutaneous, visceral, and soft tissue location that have been reported for occasional cases of JXG. We would also conclude that neither
Factor XIIIa
-nor S100+ results should preclude the diagnosis of JXG, and find that reactivity for CD4 and LCA may be used to distinguish JXG from DF when the latter is heavily lipidized or the former is not.
...
PMID:"Juvenile" xanthogranuloma: an immunophenotypic study with a reappraisal of histogenesis. 1128 4
A healthy 13-year-old female presented with a 5-month history of an enlarging red-brown, firm lower eyelid mass associated with loss of eyelashes. An excisional biopsy revealed a well-circumscribed nodule composed of coalescing nests of epithelioid cells, rare multinucleated cells, and vacuolated macrophages and spindle cells. Additional studies revealed a positive vimentin and alpha(1)-antitrypsin, and negative
S100
protein and
Factor XIIIa
immunophenotype. This constellation of clinicopathologic features is diagnostic of solitary reticulohistiocytoma, but also shows overlap with xanthogranuloma, a common childhood histiocytosis. Reticulohistiocytoma should be considered in the differential diagnosis of eyelid tumors and has the potential for local recurrence. Diffuse cutaneous reticulohistiocytosis or multicentric reticulohistiocytosis should be considered if similar cutaneous lesions with or without symptoms of arthritis are present, respectively.
...
PMID:Recurrent solitary reticulohistiocytoma of the eyelid. 1264 69
1
2
3
Next >>