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: UMLS:C0007095 (
carcinoid
)
6,990
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Small granule cells are described in the segmental bronchi of adult humans. Rarely, these cells were seen abutting the lumen of the airway. A luminal location has been described for these cells in the bronchial epithelium of human fetuses and neonates and it is suggested that luminal small granule cells may be a rare, although normal component of the adult human bronchial epithelium. The dense core granules of the small granule cells stained intensely with phosphotungstic and at low pH suggesting that they contain
glycoprotein
. Granules present in a
carcinoid
and an oat cell tumor stained similarly. The role of the small granule cell in the genesis of bronchial
carcinoid
and oat cell tumors is recognized.
...
PMID:Observations on small granule cells in adult human bronchial epithelium and in carcinoid and oat cell tumors. 5 18
"Ectopic" proteins, not distinguished immunologically from the common alpha subunit of the human
glycoprotein
hormones, were purified approximately 10,000-fold from a gastric
carcinoid
tumor (A.L.-alpha) and from tissue culture medium of bronchogenic carcinoma cell lines (ChaGo-alpha). The purified A.L.-alpha was homogeneous by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) gel electrophoresis while the purified ChaGo-alpha showed multiple components, some of which represented aggregated species. In SDS gel electrophoresis, the apparent molecular weights of A.L.-alpha (15,000) and dithioerythritol-reduced ChaGo-alpha (13,000) were significantly lower than those of the alpha subunits of human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG-alpha), luteinizing hormone, follicle-stimulating hormone, or thyroid-stimulating hormone (22,000-23,000). Binding experiments with [35S]-SDS suggested that these apparent differences in molecular weight resulted, at least in part, from diminished binding of the SDS by the normal compared to the ectopic alpha subunits. In gel chromatography, the apparent molecular weights of A.L.-alpha (27,000) and ChaGo-alpha (30,000) were slightly higher than those of normal alpha subunits (23,000-24,000). Both A.L.-alpha and ChaGo-alpha were not distinguished from hCG-alpha in ion-exchange chromatography. The composition of A.L.-alpha was similar to that of hCG-alpha in 13 amino acids but showed decreased phenylalanine and increased valine; glucosamine was identified in both A.L.-alpha and hCG-alpha. Under conditions in which hCG-alpha combined with the hCG beta subunit (hCG-beta) to produce 95% of the expected gonadotropin-binding activity in a rat testis radioreceptor-assay, A.L.-alpha incubation with hCG-beta resulted in only 2% of the expected activity, and ChaGo-alpha incubation with hCG-beta produced no detectable activity. These characteristics of ectopic alpha subunits may reflect abnormalities of neoplastic protein synthesis or carbohydrate attachment which result in polypeptides with chemical and immunologic similarity to normal subunits but with differences in physical and combining properties; alternatively, the ectopic subunits may represent as yet unrecognized alpha precursor forms.
...
PMID:Differences between purified ectopic and normal alpha subnits of human glycoprotein hormones. 115 86
Endocrine-paracrine (APUD, neuroendocrine) cells are located in the prostatic ductal and acinar epithelium. These cells are of the open and closed type and have dendritic processes. There is a wide range of secretory granule morphology presumably indicating a variety of different cell "types." Secretory immunoreactive peptides include serotonin, calcitonin (and related peptides), somatostatin, bombesin-like, thyroid-stimulating hormone-like (beta chain), and alpha-
glycoprotein
chain-like. These cells may function by endocrine, paracrine, neurocrine, and lumencrine mechanisms and play an important regulatory role both during growth and differentiation of the prostate as well as in the secretory process of the mature gland. Neuroendocrine differentiation in prostatic carcinoma is a frequent occurrence and manifests itself in several forms, including (1) small cell carcinoma, (2)
carcinoid
and
carcinoid
-like tumors, and (3) conventional adenocarcinoma with focal neuroendocrine differentiation. This latter pattern is the most common, and there is evidence that all or nearly all prostatic adenocarcinomas show at least some focal neuroendocrine differentiation. A review of the world's literature on this topic is included. Neuroendocrine differentiation generally portends a poorer prognosis but may also correlate directly with the grade. There is some evidence to suggest that neoplastic cells with neuroendocrine differentiation are resistant to hormonal therapy. Eutopic and ectopic hormone production may allow screening for prostatic carcinoma and/or monitoring for recurrence of prostatic carcinomas. Finally, the more basic implications of endocrine-paracrine cells and neuroendocrine differentiation are speculated on in reference to prostatic carcinogenesis and autocrine/paracrine tumor growth factor activity.
...
PMID:Neuroendocrine differentiation in human prostatic carcinoma. 131 90
Urinary gonadotropin fragment (UGF), a small
glycoprotein
and an intracellular processing product of human chorionic gonadotropin, has been demonstrated in trophoblast tissue and in nontrophoblastic cancers. Levels of UGF were assayed in 107 patients with malignant and benign pulmonary and esophageal lesions to determine if elevated levels were associated with the presence or progression of malignancy. There were 64 patients with primary bronchogenic carcinoma, 9 with metastatic pulmonary malignancies, 7 with lymphoma, 2 with mesothelioma, 9 with esophageal carcinoma, 1 patient each with metastatic cancer to chest wall and
carcinoid
, and 14 patients with benign pulmonary and esophageal lesions. Sensitivity was only 24% for urine samples from patients with demonstrable cancer. False-positive rates were 6% and 12% for urine samples from patients with benign lesions and those without evidence of residual cancer following treatment, respectively. Although elevated levels of UGF are present in some patients with pulmonary and esophageal cancer it is neither sensitive nor specific enough for use as a tumor marker.
...
PMID:Urinary gonadotropin fragment measurements in patients with lung and esophageal disease. 154 88
Twenty-five non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), 42 small cell lung carcinoma (SCLC), one extrapulmonary small cell carcinoma, 4
carcinoid
, and 13 non-lung cancer cell lines were analyzed for human chorionic gonadotropin (HCG) and related
glycoprotein
hormones. HCG or its subunits were present in 72% of NSCLC, 10% of SCLC, one extrapulmonary small cell carcinoma, 3/4 carcinoids and 2/13 non-lung cancer cell lines. Related
glycoprotein
hormones were undetectable. These data indicate a frequent production of HCG or its subunits by NSCLC cell lines and cell lines from tumors with
carcinoid
features. They confirm the clinical inclusion of carcinoids under the broad category of NSCLC rather than SCLC despite their neuroendocrine features. Clinicians should not assume that undifferentiated NSCLC with HCG production represent germ cell tumors.
...
PMID:Human chorionic gonadotropin and related glycoprotein hormones in lung cancer cell lines. 164 86
Expression of the alpha-subunit of
glycoprotein
hormones is an acquired feature of the endocrine cells of the oxyntic mucosa in patients with sustained serum levels of gastrin, and may be related to the hyperplasia-
carcinoid
sequence occurring in these patients. In the present study we have investigated the intragastric cellular localization and the circulating levels of alpha-subunit in a patient with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. In this patient we have found that: 1) Endocrine cells accounted for 2.29% +/- 1.44% of the total oxyntic mucosal volume (normal value: 0.9% +/- 0.4%), with the ECL cells representing 63.22% +/- 10.9% of the total endocrine cell volume (normal value: 29.8 +/- 8.8%). 2) Cells immunoreactive for the alpha-subunit were found to correspond ultrastructurally to a subpopulation of enterochromaffin-like cells, indistinguishable from similar cells devoid of significant immuno-electron microscopic labeling. 3) Immunoreactive cells included a portion of oxyntic endocrine cells with punctate granules, a feature previously observed only in
carcinoid
tumors of the oxyntic mucosa. 4) In consecutive sections of freeze-dried vapor-fixed biopsies a fraction of alpha-subunit storing cells was found to co-express histamine. 5) The serum alpha-subunit levels were abnormally elevated and paralleled those of gastrin in a secretin-stimulation test. Analysis of similar curves in two other patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, and five patients with hypergastrinemic atrophic gastritis, all presenting alpha-subunit containing oxyntic endocrine cells, showed significant alpha-subunit elevations only in the patients with ulcerogenic syndrome.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Glycoprotein hormone alpha subunit in endocrine cells of human oxyntic mucosa. Studies on its relation to neuroendocrine tumors. 169 Jan 69
Sixty-six human lung neoplasms of different histological types and normal bronchial epithelial cells of newborn babies and adults were studied histochemically using ConA and PSA and the result was compared with that of CEA. Normal mucosal epithelium could bind to ConA, and the location of ConA receptors was related to the maturation of mucosal epithelial cells. Normal mucosal epithelium in adult bronchi failed to be stained with PSA and anti-CEA, and most of lung neoplasms could bind to PSA and positive for CEA, indicating that new glycoconjugate and CEA-
glycoprotein
could be synthesized after malignant transformation of mucosal epithelium. The binding of ConA, PSA and anti-CEA to cell membrane and nucleus membrane was characteristic of squamous cell lung cancer while lung adenocarcinoma mainly showed cytoplasmic staining. The weak staining of ConA, PSA and anti-CEA in small cell carcinoma and negative staining in
carcinoid
and malignant melanoma help testify that their origin may differ from that of squamous cell carcinoma and adenocarcinoma.
...
PMID:[Histochemical localization of glyco-conjugate and CEA-glycoprotein in human lung neoplasms]. 224 89
One hundred and one cases of lung cancer were immunohistochemically studied for stainability with Leu-7 (anti-myelin fiber associated
glycoprotein
) and OKT-9 (anti-transferrin receptor) monoclonal antibodies. All small cell carcinomas and
carcinoid
tumors were positively stained by Leu-7, and 22 of 41 differentiated adenocarcinomas were also positively stained, especially well-differentiated Clara cell-type adenocarcinoma, (11/14 cases). However, only one of 26 squamous cell carcinomas, one of six large cell carcinomas, one of six adenosquamous carcinomas and none of 16 poorly differentiated adenocarcinomas were stained by Leu-7. On the other hand, all squamous cell carcinomas (26/26 cases), 10 of the 16 poorly differentiated adenocarcinomas, four of the six large cell carcinomas showed positive membranous staining with OKT-9. However, only one of 41 differentiated adenocarcinomas and no small cell carcinomas nor
carcinoid
tumors were stained by OKT-9. The stainability of lung cancer by these antibodies is discussed.
...
PMID:Stainability of lung cancer cells with Leu-7 and OKT-9 monoclonal antibodies. 241 90
To demonstrate unbalanced distribution of subunits of human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) in the lung and lung tumors and to clarify its significance in differentiation and carcinogenesis of the lung, immunohistochemistry was performed on human fetus, infant, and adult lungs, and endocrine and nonendocrine tumors of the lung. Tissues were immunostained for alpha-subunits and for beta-subunits of
glycoprotein
hormones (hCG, luteinizing hormone, follicle stimulating hormone, and thyroid stimulating hormone), serotonin, and gastrin-releasing peptide. Immunoreactive alpha-subunit was first identified in endocrine-like cells at the 39th gestational week, and was found in all infant lungs and two-thirds of adult lungs. The hCG beta-immunoreactive cells were extremely rare in an adult lung, and were not found in fetus or infant lungs. The alpha-subunit-containing cells were present in neuroepithelial bodies, tumorlets,
carcinoid
tumors, and small cell carcinomas of the lung (SCCL). There were occasionally alpha-subunit-containing cells in non-SCCL but one of the carcinomas also contained many serotonin-positive and gastrin-releasing peptide-positive cells in the same region. All alpha-subunit-immunoreactive cells lacked immunoreactivity for beta-subunits of
glycoprotein
hormones, except some for hCG beta in one
carcinoid
tumor. Immunoreactive cells for isolated hCG beta appeared much more frequently in non-SCCL than in SCCL. Most non-SCCL containing hCG beta-positive cells did not show alpha-subunit-immunoreactivity. Thus, immunohistochemical distribution of hCG-subunits was unbalanced and hCG-subunits may be expressed through an independent mechanism, commonly in the lung and lung tumors. The significance of isolated alpha-subunit is further discussed in light of multidirectional differentiation of lung neoplasms (14, 17).
...
PMID:Human chorionic gonadotropin in lung and lung tumors. Immunohistochemical study on unbalanced distribution of subunits. 242 65
Previous studies have shown that hyperplastic endocrine cells of the oxyntic mucosa in patients with atrophic gastritis may express immunoreactivity for the alpha-subunit of human chorionic gonadotropin (alpha-HCG, common to all
glycoprotein
hormones). Since this endocrine proliferation is regarded as dependent on the trophic effect of the concomitant hypergastrinemia, the relation between immunohistochemical expression of alpha-HCG by oxyntic endocrine cells and serum levels of gastrin were investigated. The study was performed on endoscopic gastric biopsies of the oxyntic mucosa from 49 patients subdivided into the following groups: A) with histologically normal mucosa and normogastrinemia (22 cases), B) with atrophic gastritis and normogastrinemia (12 cases), C) with normal mucosa and hypergastrinemia (Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, retained antrum) (7 cases) and D) with atrophic gastritis and hypergastrinemia (with or without pernicious anemia) (8 cases). The alpha-HCG immunoreactive cells were found in all hypergastrinemic patients (groups C and D), regardless of the concomitant pathological condition of the mucosa. These cells accounted for 7.8% to 44.7% of the number of Grimelius argyrophil cells in consecutive serial sections. In contrast, alpha-HCG-containing cells were exceptional or absent in most normogastrinemic patients. Their number was sizable in only two cases of group A and three cases of group B, where it ranged from 2.5% to 14.8% of the number of argyrophil cells. It was concluded that expression of alpha-HCG is another feature of oxyntic endocrine cells associated with hypergastrinemia in addition to those previously recognized such as development of hyperplasia and/or
carcinoid
tumors.
...
PMID:Expression of glycoprotein hormone alpha-subunit by endocrine cells of the oxyntic mucosa is associated with hypergastrinemia. 245 43
1
2
3
Next >>