Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0001418 (adenocarcinoma)
68,496 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Anomalous expression of certain types of mucins occurs in pancreatic tumors, but little is known about the causes. MUC2 and MUC5AC are not expressed in normal pancreas. In the present study an immunohistochemical screening showed that MUC2 antigen was expressed in 6% of invasive tumors. Of the pancreatic cell lines, 2.4% expressed MUC2 message and antigen. In contrast, MUC5AC antigen was expressed in 86-100% of invasive adenocarcinoma (depending on the antibody). MUC5AC message and antigen were expressed in 66.7% of the cell lines tested. A polymerase chain reaction based assay was used to determine if methylation of CpG sites immediately 5' of the transcription initiation sites of the MUC2 and MUC5AC genes could be related to mucin expression in the cell lines. Digestibility by the methylation sensitive restriction enzyme HpaII correlated with the presence or absence of mRNA in 100% and 77.8% of the cell lines for MUC2 and MUC5AC, respectively. Treatment of a cell line that did not express MUC2 or MUC5AC gene products with the DNA methyltransferase inhibitor 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine resulted in an increase in MUC2 message but no change in MUC5AC message. In summary, the expression of MUC2 gene products correlated well with methylation of the proximal region of the promoter whereas expression of MUC5AC may involve additional regions or other mechanisms.
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PMID:Methylation status of promoters and expression of MUC2 and MUC5AC mucins in pancreatic cancer cells. 1252 22

Our report describes a 66-yr-old man who underwent surgical resection of the pancreas twice within a period of 3 yr for primary and recurrent intraductal papillary mucinous tumors (IPMTs). During the second operation, a minute invasive ductal carcinoma (IDC) was accidentally discovered in the resected specimen of the residual pancreas. The similarity and continuity between this IDC and recurrent IPMT were not recognized histologically. A solid tumor was found in the hepatoduodenal ligament 3 mo after the second operation. We performed a third operation, performing laparotomy and intra-operative radiotherapy, but could not extirpate the tumor. A biopsy specimen obtained from the tumor during this third operation revealed adenocarcinoma, and the patient later died because of tumor progression. We immunohistochemically analyzed the expression of HER-2/neu, Smad4, p16, p21, p53, mucin immunophenotypes and the Ki-67 labeling index in this series of pancreatic-duct neoplasias. Overexpression of HER-2/neu and loss of Smad4 were detected in the minute IDC, which was very different from the immunohistochemical features of both the primary and recurrent IPMTs. The IDC also showed a MUC1-positive/MUC2-negative phenotype. Therefore, we suggest that de novo IDC may occur in IPMT patients, especially those with multiple tumor recurrence. The present case may be helpful in understanding the pathogenesis of pancreatic duct lesions.
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PMID:Minute invasive ductal carcinoma of the residual pancreas after distal pancreatectomy for intraductal papillary-mucinous tumor. 1262 31

There are a large number of stable pancreatic ductal carcinoma cell lines that are used by researchers worldwide. Detailed data about their differentiation status and growth features are, however, often lacking. We therefore attempted to classify commonly used pancreatic carcinoma cell lines according to defined cell biological criteria. Twelve pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma cell lines were cultured as monolayers and spheroids and graded according to their ultrastructural features. The grading system was based on the integrity of membrane structures and on the presence of mucin granules, cell organelles, nuclear and cellular polymorphism, cell polarity, and lumen formation. On the basis of the resulting scores the cell lines were classified as well, moderately, or poorly differentiated. In addition, immunocytochemistry was performed for the markers cytokeratin 7, 8, 18, 19, carcinoembryonic antigen, MUC1 MUC2, MUC5, and MUC6. The population doubling time of monolayer cultures, determined by a tetrazolium salt based proliferation assay was correlated with the ultrastructural grade. The grading of the ultrastructural features of the monolayers, and particularly of the spheroids, revealed that Capan-1 and Capan-2 cells were well differentiated; Colo357, HPAF-2, Aspc-1, A818-4, BxPc3, and Panc89 cells were moderately differentiated and PancTu-I, Panc1, Pt45P1, and MiaPaCa-2 cells poorly differentiated. Membrane-bound MUC1 staining was a characteristic of well differentiated cell lines. The population doubling time of the monolayer cultures was related to the differentiation grade. No relationship was found between the p53, K-ras, DPC4/Smad4, or p16(INK4a) mutation status and the grade of differentiation. We conclude that the proposed ultrastructural grading system combined with the proliferative activity provides a basis for further comparative studies of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma cell lines.
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PMID:A comprehensive characterization of pancreatic ductal carcinoma cell lines: towards the establishment of an in vitro research platform. 1269 24

Gastric intestinal metaplasia (IM) and gastric cancer are associated with Helicobacter pylori, but the bacterium often is undetectable in these lesions. To unravel this apparent paradox, IM, H. pylori presence, and the expression of H. pylori virulence genes were quantified concurrently using histologic testing, in situ hybridization, and immunohistochemistry. H. pylori was detected inside metaplastic, dysplastic, and neoplastic epithelial cells, and cagA and babA2 expression was colocalized. Importantly, expression of cagA was significantly higher in patients with IM and adenocarcinoma than in control subjects. The preneoplastic "acidic" MUC2 mucin was detected only in the presence of H. pylori, and MUC2 expression was higher in patients with IM, dysplasia, and cancer. These novel findings are compatible with the hypothesis that all stages of gastric carcinogenesis are fostered by persistent intracellular expression of H. pylori virulence genes, especially cagA inside MUC2-producing precancerous gastric cells and pleomorphic cancer cells.
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PMID:Intracellular and interstitial expression of Helicobacter pylori virulence genes in gastric precancerous intestinal metaplasia and adenocarcinoma. 1269 95

Most adenomas and carcinomas of small intestine and extrahepatic bile ducts arise in the region of Vater's papilla. In FAP it is the main location for carcinomas after proctocolectomy. In many cases symptoms due to stenosis lead to diagnosis in an early tumor stage. In about 80% curative intended resection is possible. Operability is the most relevant prognostic factor. Inflammatory changes, fibrosis, regeneratory changes after endoscopic manipulation, hyperplasia, preneoplastic lesions close to carcinoma, deeply sited carcinomas under protruded, non-neoplastic duodenal mucosa make the diagnosis difficult on biopsy material. Histologically, intestinal type adenocarcinoma, pancreatobiliary type adenocarcinoma, undifferentiated carcinomas and unusual types can be differentiated. In our own series comprising 45 resected ampullary carcinomas 6 from 10 intestinal type adenocarcinomas, and 4 carcinomas of unusual types expressed the immunohistochemical marker profile of intestinal mucosa (keratin 7-, keratin 20+, MUC2+). 17 from 21 pancreatobiliary type adenocarcinomas, 4 undifferentiated carcinomas, as well as 3 papillary carcinomas showed the immunohistochemical profile of pancreaticobiliary duct mucosa (keratin 7+, keratin 20-, MUC2-). 3 invasive carcinomas which were negative for these markers, showed one of these characteristic marker-combinations in non-invasive adenomatous parts. These findings support the concept of histogenetically different ampullary carcinomas which are developing from the intestinal or from the pancreaticobiliary type mucosa of Vater's papilla. Molecular alterations in ampullary carcinomas are similar to those of colorectal as well as pancreatic carcinomas, although they appear in different frequencies. In future studies molecular alterations in ampullary carcinomas should be correlated closely with the different histologic tumor types. The histologic classification should reflect consequently the histogenesis of ampullary tumors from the two different types of papillary mucosa.
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PMID:[Pathogenesis and histomorphology of ampullary carcinomas and their precursor lesions. Review and individual findings]. 1273 53

Pancreatic mucinous noncystic (colloid) carcinomas (MNCC) differ from the usual ductal adenocarcinomas in their mucin expression profile and share with many extrapancreatic mucinous carcinomas the expression of MUC2. Because mucinous carcinomas are frequently associated with mutations of the DNA mismatch repair genes, causing them to exhibit the so-called mutator phenotype, we decided to investigate whether MNCCs of the pancreas are characterized by microsatellite instability (MSI). Twelve carcinomas with a mucinous phenotype (8 mucinous noncystic carcinomas, 3 intraductal papillary-mucinous carcinomas with an invasive muconodular component, and 1 ductal adenocarcinoma with an extensive mucinous noncystic component) and 11 ductal adenocarcinomas were immunostained with monoclonal antibodies to the mismatch repair gene products hMLH1, hMSH2, and hMSH6. For MSI analysis, DNA was isolated from microdissected tissue, and five primary microsatellites (BAT 25, BAT 26, D5S346, D17S250, and D2S123) were analyzed. MSI was diagnosed in case a novel allele was found, compared with the normal tissue. The criterion for LOH was a 75% signal reduction. All carcinomas tested exhibited nuclear expression of mismatch repair gene products, except for one MNCC that also showed MSI at the molecular level. The data suggest that pancreatic carcinomas with a mucinous phenotype (MUC2+/MUC1-) do not appear to normally exhibit mutations in the mismatch repair genes and therefore differ in their carcinogenesis from those in other organs.
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PMID:Pancreatic mucinous noncystic (colloid) carcinomas and intraductal papillary mucinous carcinomas are usually microsatellite stable. 1280 58

Intestinal metaplasia is a histologic hallmark of Barrett's esophagus and chronic gastritis. Intestinal metaplasia may progress to dysplasia or carcinomas without proper treatment. Most cases of intestinal metaplasia are easily recognized on hematoxylin and eosin-stained sections. However, some cases of intestinal metaplasia may be hard to recognize if they lack the characteristic mucin-producing cells and Paneth cells, or if they are small in size. Recently, keratin 7, keratin 20, and MUC2 expression patterns were reported to be useful in confirming the diagnosis of intestinal metaplasia. We studied hepatocyte (Hep) antigen (a hepatocellular antigen mainly expressing in normal and neoplastic hepatic tissues) in 33 cases of Barrett's esophagus (9 cases associated with esophageal adenocarcinoma) and 13 cases of chronic gastritis associated with intestinal metaplasia and gastric adenocarcinoma. Hep monoclonal antibody recognizes intestinal metaplasia in all cases. We also compared expression of Hep with that of keratin 7, keratin 20, and MUC2 in intestinal metaplasia. The specificity and sensitivity of Hep for intestinal metaplasia were higher than that of keratin 7 and keratin 20, or MUC2. We conclude that Hep may be used as a single diagnostic marker for intestinal metaplasia.
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PMID:Hepatocyte antigen as a marker of intestinal metaplasia. 1282 87

Salivary duct carcinoma is a relatively uncommon aggressive neoplasm, typically found in the parotid glands of older men. The histologic appearance is that of an in situ and invasive high-grade adenocarcinoma, and it closely resembles ductal carcinoma of the breast. Several variants of the latter are very well known, but only papillary, sarcomatoid, and low-grade subtypes have so far been reported in salivary duct carcinoma. This study describes the clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical findings in four examples of an additional previously undescribed variant, rich in mucin. Each tumor showed areas of typical salivary duct carcinoma, but in addition there were lakes of epithelial mucin-containing malignant cells, i.e., mucinous (colloid) carcinoma. All four tumors expressed androgen receptors, cytokeratins, epithelial membrane antigen, gross cystic disease fluid protein-15, and carcinoembryonic antigen, but S-100 protein, other myoepithelial markers, and estrogen and progesterone receptors were negative. The mucin antigen profile showed positivity for MUC2, MUC5B, and MUC6 in all cases but only rare staining with MUC5AC and MUC7. Strong immunohistochemical overexpression of HER2/neu was demonstrated in one tumor, together with amplification by fluorescence in situ hybridization; another case was weakly positive with just one antiserum, but the remaining two tumors were completely negative. Small quantities of mucin have often been described in salivary duct carcinoma but not large extracellular mucinous lakes, which though prominent in the present series, were not as extensive as in mucinous adenocarcinoma. The relatively poor clinical outcome of the patients in our study mirrored that seen in usual-type salivary duct carcinoma and emphasizes the importance of differentiating mucin-rich salivary duct carcinoma from pure mucinous (colloid) adenocarcinoma, a tumor not fully defined, but possibly with a better prognosis.
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PMID:Mucin-rich variant of salivary duct carcinoma: a clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical study of four cases. 1617 3

A multistep model for pancreatic adenocarcinoma has been proposed recently. In this model, well-defined, noninvasive ductal lesions are recognized as precursors of invasive cancer and have been classified under the nomenclature of pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasia, or PanIN. Increasing evidence suggests that PanINs represent true neoplasms of the pancreatic ductal epithelium, accumulating histologic and genetic abnormalities in their progression toward invasive cancer. We have constructed a tissue microarray containing 55 PanIN lesions of all histologic grades in order to perform a multicomponent analysis of the pancreatic adenocarcinoma progression model. The protein products of 14 genes encompassing a variety of functional classes, such as tumor suppressor genes (p53, Smad4/Dpc4), oncogenes (beta-catenin), cell cycle antigens (p16, cyclin D1), proliferation antigens (Ki-67, topoisomerase II alpha), and epithelial apomucins (MUC1, MUC2, MUC5), as well as "novel" genes described as differentially up-regulated in invasive pancreas cancer by global microarray expression analysis (mesothelin, prostate stem cell antigen, fascin, and 14-3-3varsigma), were analyzed by immunohistochemistry on the PanIN tissue microarray. Comparison of the results from the current study with previously published data performed on routine histologic sections of PanINs demonstrates that tissue microarrays are a valid platform for molecular analysis not only of invasive cancers but of precursor lesions as well. In addition, this study demonstrates that molecular abnormalities in PanINs are not random but can usually be stratified into "early" changes (e.g., expression of MUC5 and prostate stem antigen, or loss of p16), "intermediate" changes (e.g., expression of cyclin D1), and "late" changes (e.g., expression of p53, proliferation antigens, MUC1, mesothelin, and 14-3-3varsigma, or loss of Smad4/Dpc4). Understanding the molecular pathogenesis of precursor lesions of invasive pancreatic adenocarcinomas using a high-throughput tissue microarray-based approach is a valuable adjunct to designing rational strategies for early detection of this lethal neoplasm.
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PMID:Multicomponent analysis of the pancreatic adenocarcinoma progression model using a pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasia tissue microarray. 1367 54

Barrett's mucosa consists of metaplastic columnar epithelium (specialized columnar epithelium) of the esophagus. Recently, "short-segment Barrett's esophagus (SSBE)" was proposed. In the present study, we examined immunohistochemical mucin expression and the Ki-67 labeling index (LI) of SSBE, in 5-15 mm lengths. All 27 SSBE cases showed gastric mucin (MUC5AC, HGM, MUC6). CD10 and MUC2, which were markers of intestinal phenotypes, were detected in 13 (48.1%) and 14 (51.9%) of the 27 SSBE cases. Ki-67 LI of SSBE positive cases for CD10 was 23.6 %, while that of SSBE negative cases for CD10 was 14.4 % (p < 0.05). SSBE cases were divided into two groups: one was gastric epithelium type with low Ki-67 LI, and the other was metaplastic epithelium with intestinal metaplasia and high Ki-67 LI. The latter group was suggested to be more important as a premalignant lesion of esophageal adenocarcinoma.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical mucin expression of short-segment Barrett's esophagus. 1471 30


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