Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0007097 (carcinoma)
152,788 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Small adenocarcinomas of the colorectum showing no evidence of origin from an adenoma have been called de novo carcinomas, a name that implies an origin via a different molecular genetic mechanism than the usual colorectal carcinoma which develops from an adenoma. Using microsatellite analysis, 35 early (pT1) de novo and 36 pT1 ex-adenoma carcinomas were compared using 8 microsatellite loci at 6 different chromosomal loci (1p, 2p, 8p, 5q, 17p, and 18q) known or hypothesized to be important for colorectal carcinogenesis. The rate of loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at the 17p locus (near the p53 gene) was significantly higher in the de novo than in the ex-adenoma group (73 vs. 37%, P = 0.004). The rates of LOH at the other loci (including the APC and DCC genes) and the rate of MSI were not significantly different in the two groups. These results indicate that de novo carcinomas of the colorectum develop via a similar carcinogenetic pathway as conventional ex-adenoma carcinomas; however, their higher rate of LOH at 17p is evidence for a biologically more advanced lesion with more frequent p53 mutations, consistent with clinicopathological data indicating that de novo carcinomas are more aggressive than ex-adenoma carcinomas.
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PMID:Loss of heterozygosity and microsatellite instability in de novo versus ex-adenoma carcinomas of the colorectum. 984 87

Microsatellite instability and allelic deletions of tumor suppressor genes have been observed frequently in tumors. Molecular pathogenesis of the development of dysplasia and carcinoma in ulcerative colitis is still unclear. In order to detect microsatellite alterations in ulcerative colitis, we analyzed loss of heterozygosity (LOH) and microsatellite instability (MI) on chromosomes 3, 6, 7, 12, and tumor suppressor gene loci, including p53, APC, and p16, of chronically inflamed, non-dysplastic epithelium after microdissection. Twelve of 13 (92%) cases showed LOH and/or MI at one or more loci. LOH at chromosome 3 and MI at chromosome 12 were observed in 50% and 62%, respectively. However, LOH at p53 and p16 was detected in only one case each. These results suggest that chronic inflammation may initiate microsatellite alteration, which subsequently transform ulcerative colitis to dysplasia or cancer. This finding provides information for the evaluation and treatment of patients with ulcerative colitis.
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PMID:Loss of heterozygosity and microsatellite instability in non-neoplastic mucosa from patients with chronic ulcerative colitis. 985 92

The alterations of the haemostatic system (platelet count, activated partial thromboplastin time [APTT], thromboplastin time [standard test, modified test], thrombin time, fibrinogen concentration, activity of the coagulation factors II, V, VII, X, VIII:C, IX, XI, XII, of prekallikrein, high molecular weight kininogen, antithrombin III, protein C, plasminogen and alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor, concentration of soluble fibrin and fibrin(ogen) degradation products [FDP], resonance thrombogram) were described in seven dogs with haemorrhagic diathesis in consequence of an infiltrative, growing mammary carcinoma with multifocal invasion of lymphatic and blood vessels. In most of the cases metastases in different organs could be demonstrated. In every case a serious stage of disseminated intravascular coagulation and hyperfibrinolysis was existent. This was indicated by the distinctly increased concentration (p < 0.0001) of soluble fibrin (27.7 [16.0-79.2] micrograms/ml, median [minimum-maximum], reference range [RR.]: < 9.4 micrograms/ml) and FDP (340 [50-860] micrograms/ml, RR.: < 18 micrograms/ml) as well as a diminished plasma level of nearly all components of the coagulation and fibrinolytic system concerning especially the concentration of fibrinogen (0.16 [0.01-0.46] g/l, RR.: 1.17-3.09 g/l), the activity of factors V (30 [21-40]%, RR.: 75-158%) and VIII:C (9 [4-16]%, RR.: 72-136%) as well as the activity of protein C (8 [3-13]%, RR.: 68-139%) (each: p < 0.0001).
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PMID:[Disseminated intravascular coagulation and hyperfibrinolysis in dogs with metastasizing mammary carcinoma]. 986 56

Tcf-4 is a member of the Tcf/Lef family of transcription factors that interact functionally with beta-catenin to mediate Wnt signaling in vertebrates. We have previously demonstrated that the tumor suppressor function of APC in the small intestine is mediated via regulation of Tcf-4/beta-catenin transcriptional activity. To gain further insight into the role of Tcf-4 in development and carcinogenesis we have generated several mouse monoclonal antibodies, one of which is specific for Tcf-4 and another of which recognizes both Tcf-3 and Tcf-4. Immunohistochemistry performed with the Tcf 4- specific monoclonal antibody revealed high levels of expression in normal intestinal and mammary epithelium and carcinomas derived therefrom. Additional sites of Tcf-3 expression, as revealed by staining with the Tcf-3/-4 antibody, occurred only within the stomach epithelium, hair follicles, and keratinocytes of the skin. A temporal Tcf-4 expression gradient was observed along the crypt-villus axis of human small intestinal epithelium: strong Tcf-4 expression was present within the crypts of early (week 16) human fetal small intestine, with the villi showing barely detectable Tcf-4 protein levels. Tcf-4 expression levels increased dramatically on the villi of more highly developed (week 22) fetal small intestine. We conclude that Tcf-4 exhibits a highly restricted expression pattern related to the developmental stage of the intestinal epithelium. The high levels of Tcf-4 expression in mammary epithelium and mammary carcinomas may also indicate a role in the development of this tissue and breast carcinoma.
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PMID:Restricted high level expression of Tcf-4 protein in intestinal and mammary gland epithelium. 991 15

We report two familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) kindreds with thyroid cancer, harboring two apparently novel germlineAPC mutations. The clinical phenotype in the first kindred was typical of classical adenomatous polyposis, whereas the second kindred exhibited an attenuated adenomatous polyposis phenotype. There was a female predominance with a mean age of 34 years (range, 23-49) at cancer diagnosis. Multiple sections of four thyroid tumors from three FAP patients were analyzed in detail. Histological examination of thyroid tumors showed a range of morphological features. Some tumors exhibited typical papillary architecture and were associated with multifocal carcinoma; in others, there were unusual areas of cribriform morphology, and spindle-cell components with whorled architecture. Immunoreactivity for thyroglobulin and high molecular weight keratins was strong. Somatic APC mutation analysis revealed an insertion of a novel long interspersed nuclear element-1-like sequence in one tumor sample, suggesting disruption of APC. In three FAP patients, ret/PTC-1 and ret/PTC-3 were expressed in thyroid cancers. No positivity was observed for ret/ PTC-2. p53 immunohistochemistry was positive in only one section of a recurrent thyroid tumor sample. Our data suggest that genetic alterations in FAP-associated thyroid cancer involve loss of function of APC along with the gain of function of ret/PTC, while alterations of p53 do not appear to be an early event in thyroid tumorigenesis.
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PMID:Familial adenomatous polyposis-associated thyroid cancer: a clinical, pathological, and molecular genetics study. 991 27

Although most gallbladder carcinomas evolve from dysplasia and carcinoma in situ, the role of gallbladder adenomas in the pathogenesis of gallbladder carcinoma is still controversial. A series of molecular changes including loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at 17p (TP53 gene), 13q (RB gene), 18q (DCC gene), and 9p21 (CDKN2a gene) chromosomal regions have been identified in dysplasias, carcinomas in situ, and invasive carcinomas of the gallbladder, whereas mutations in K- and N-ras genes are rare. To determine whether the molecular abnormalities of adenomas are similar to those found in carcinomas, we obtained extracted DNA from precisely microdissected tissue from 16 gallbladder adenomas (14 pyloric and 2 intestinal-type). We determined the presence of mutations in TP53, K- and N-ras genes, and LOH at five chromosomal regions (5q22 APC-MCC region, RB, TP53, DCC and 9p21-CDKN2a). For the TP53 mutation study, single strand conformational polymorphism (SSCP) analysis in exons 4 to 8 were performed. K- and N-ras mutations detection was performed by designed restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) method and sequencing. Only a single LOH (at 5q22) was detected in a gallbladder adenoma of intestinal type. No mutations at the TP53 were detected. Four adenomas (25%) showed K-ras mutations (two in codon 12 and two in codon 61). We conclude that gallbladder adenoma lacks the molecular changes frequently detected in dysplasia, carcinoma in situ, and invasive carcinoma of the gallbladder. Likewise the occurrence of K-ras mutations at codon 12 and 61 in 25% of adenomas strongly suggests that these lesions are not precursors of invasive gallbladder carcinoma.
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PMID:Gallbladder adenomas have molecular abnormalities different from those present in gallbladder carcinomas. 992 22

Serrated adenoma has been recently proposed as a distinct histological lesion of the colorectum. This study examined p53 immunoreactivity, mutations of exons 5-8 of the p53 gene, codon 12 of the Ki-ras gene by PCR-SSCP analyses, and microsatellite instability in 19 serrated adenomas, ten adenocarcinomas in/with serrated adenomas, 23 hyperplastic nodules, four hyperplastic polyps and 29 tubular adenomas of the colorectum. Eleven of 11 (100 per cent) serrated adenomas had p53 immunoreactivity and all six (100 per cent) adenocacinomas in/with serrated adenomas exhibited moderate to severe p53 immunoreactivity. It was confirmed that 9 of 19 (47 per cent) serrated adenomas and 5 of 10 (50 per cent) adenocarcinomas in/with serrated adenomas harboured p53 gene mutations. On the other hand, no p53 gene mutation was detected in the other colorectal lesions. Meanwhile, 11 (58 per cent) serrated adenomas and six (60 per cent) adenocarcinomas in/with serrated adenomas had Ki-ras gene mutations, as also did 9 of 23 (39 per cent) hyperplastic nodules, 3 of 4 (75 per cent) hyperplastic polyps, and 12 of 29 (41 per cent) tubular adenomas. Microsatellite instability was detected in one (5 per cent) serrated adenoma and one (10 per cent) adenocarcinoma in a serrated adenoma. The other lesions did not show microsatellite instability. Serrated adenomas had significantly frequent p53 gene mutations compared with hyperplastic lesions or tubular adenomas (p < 0.005). On the other hand, they did not exhibit significant differences in mutations of the Ki-ras gene or in microsatellite instability. Genetic changes were then examined in small parts of serrated adenomas, such as the upper or lower parts of crypts, to determine the extent of gene mutations by using a microdissection technique. Exon 15 of the APC gene and the DCC gene, in addition to the p53 and Ki-ras genes and microsatellite instability, were analysed. Identical mutations of the p53 gene were found in both invasive adenocarcinomas and adjacent serrated adenomas by direct sequencing, suggesting single clonal origins for those lesions. Mutations of the APC gene and microsatellite instability were heterogeneous in some lesions. No loss of heterozygosity (LOH) of the DCC gene was found. These findings suggest that mutations of the p53 gene are the most characteristic genetic alterations in serrated adenomas, as a relatively early event in a multistep carcinogenic pathway of this type of colorectal lesion, that might be distinct from the ordinary adenoma-carcinoma sequence or from carcinogenesis via mutations of mismatch repair genes.
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PMID:Frequent p53 gene mutations in serrated adenomas of the colorectum. 992 27

Precise correlation of histomorphology with the results of molecular genetic analysis is difficult in gastric cancer tissue composed of intestinal and diffuse types. A novel microdissection procedure was applied to correlate p53 and APC allelic loss with histologic type and tumor stage (mucosal vs. invasive cancer) in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded specimens of 25 gastric cancers. In addition, mucosal and invasive lesions were dissected from each of 11 invasive gastric cancers to study progression, and allelic loss of the p53 and APC genes was assessed. The p53 gene underwent loss of heterozygosity (LOH) in 4 of 4 informative cases of intestinal-type gastric cancer with mucosal lesions associated with invasion. By contrast, no p53 LOH was found among 6 informative cases with mucosal cancer. LOH of the APC gene in both intestinal and diffuse types of cancer was detected in 4 of 7 and 5 of 6 informative cases, respectively. These data suggest that allelic deletion of the p53 gene in intestinal-type gastric carcinoma predicts the invasive potential of mucosal cancer, and that inactivation of the APC gene plays a role in the genetic tumorigenesis of both intestinal and diffuse types of gastric cancer. Microdissection can correlate genetic alterations with histologic morphology in gastric cancer.
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PMID:Correlation of histologic morphology and tumor stage with molecular genetic analysis using microdissection in gastric carcinomas. 999 Apr 80

Overexpression of cell surface glycoproteins of the CD44 family is an early event in the colorectal adenoma-carcinoma sequence. This suggests a link with disruption of APC tumor suppressor protein-mediated regulation of beta-catenin/Tcf-4 signaling, which is crucial in initiating tumorigenesis. To explore this hypothesis, we analyzed CD44 expression in the intestinal mucosa of mice and humans with genetic defects in either APC or Tcf-4, leading to constitutive activation or blockade of the beta-catenin/Tcf-4 pathway, respectively. We show that CD44 expression in the non-neoplastic intestinal mucosa of Apc mutant mice is confined to the crypt epithelium but that CD44 is strongly overexpressed in adenomas as well as in invasive carcinomas. This overexpression includes the standard part of the CD44 (CD44s) as well as variant exons (CD44v). Interestingly, deregulated CD44 expression is already present in aberrant crypt foci with dysplasia (ACFs), the earliest detectable lesions of colorectal neoplasia. Like ACFs of Apc-mutant mice, ACFs of familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) patients also overexpress CD44. In sharp contrast, Tcf-4 mutant mice show a complete absence of CD44 in the epithelium of the small intestine. This loss of CD44 concurs with loss of stem cell characteristics, shared with adenoma cells. Our results indicate that CD44 expression is part of a genetic program controlled by the beta-catenin/Tcf-4 signaling pathway and suggest a role for CD44 in the generation and turnover of epithelial cells.
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PMID:Expression of CD44 in Apc and Tcf mutant mice implies regulation by the WNT pathway. 1002 9

We performed molecular biological studies as well as immunohistochemical analysis of three cases of giant cell carcinoma of the pancreas. Histologically, one case was a pleomorphic giant cell carcinoma consisting of pleomorphic giant/ small cells and spindle cells, one an osteoclast-like giant cell tumor composed of osteoclastoid giant cells and pleomorphic small cells, and one a pleomorphic giant cell carcinoma with osteoclastoid giant cells. Immunohistochemically, pleomorphic giant cells and small pleomorphic cells were positive for epithelial and mesenchymal markers throughout the cases. Osteoclastoid cells were strongly positive for PG-M1 (CD68), but negative for lysozyme and epithelial markers. Pleomorphic spindle cells showed the same immunoreactivity as pleomorphic giant/small cells. Genetically, all cases contained a mutation in the K-ras (codons 12, 13) oncogene, but neither p53 (exons 5-8) nor p16INK4 (exons 1, 2) gene mutations were found in any case. Furthermore, Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) of the p53, p161NK4. APC, and DPC4 gene loci was not found in any of the cases. Immunohistochemical study demonstrated this tumor to be of epithelial origin with mesenchymal differentiation. Genetically, initiation of the tumor is similar to that of usual ductal adenocarcinoma, but progression might be rather different. The peculiar histologic and biologic features of this tumor would be the result of changes in other functional genes.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical and molecular analysis of giant cell carcinoma of the pancreas: a report of three cases. 1020 90


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