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:C0007097 (
carcinoma
)
152,788
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
p63
, a homologue of the p53 gene, is considered to be essential for the normal development of stratified epithelia including urothelium. To examine possible roles of
p63
in urothelial tumorigenesis,
p63
expression was systematically examined in normal urothelium, low-grade papillary noninvasive (LPN) urothelial tumours, and high-grade or invasive carcinomas, using either an isoform-nonspecific or a Delta N-isoform-specific antibody. Expression profiles of
p63
were also analysed in cultured cells. Immunoreactivity with the two antibodies was virtually identical in tissue samples examined. Basal and intermediate cell layers of normal urothelium showed intense nuclear
p63
immunostaining. This normal staining pattern was preserved in a majority of LPN tumours, whereas it was frequently impaired in high-grade or muscle-invasive carcinomas. At the mRNA level, Delta Np63 expression predominated over TAp63, and amounts of Delta Np63 mRNA correlated with
p63
immunoreactivity, confirming that Delta Np63 accounts for
p63
expressed in urothelial tissues. In cultured cells, Delta Np63 was also expressed in low-grade tumour cells as well as normal urothelial cells, but undetectable in high-grade aggressive
carcinoma
cells. Interestingly, impaired Delta Np63 expression significantly associated with reduced beta-catenin expression that was possibly related to progression of urothelial neoplasms. Thus, impaired Delta Np63 expression characterises aggressive phenotypes of urothelial neoplasms.
...
PMID:Impaired Delta Np63 expression associates with reduced beta-catenin and aggressive phenotypes of urothelial neoplasms. 1261 84
P63, a p53 homologue, is considered to be a marker of myoepithelial cells in breast tissue. This study was carried out to determine the sensitivity of
p63
in detecting myoepithelial cells in DCIS and to compare the results obtained with smooth-muscle actin (1A4) in an attempt to verify the reliability of
p63
as a possible marker of microinvasion in breast
carcinoma
. Fifteen DCIS of the breast were submitted to immunohistochemical analysis with anti-
p63
and 1A4 antibodies and to a double immunolabeling study using
p63
with 1A4. The double immunolabeling study showed that the same cells positive for
p63
were also positive for 1A4. The three cases of DCIS with micro-invasion were negative for
p63
and 1A4 in the foci of invasiveness. P63 staining was continuous in five of twelve cases of DCIS without microinvasion, being focal and discontinuous in 6 cases and completely negative in one case. Smooth-muscle actin staining was continuous in nine of twelve cases, including the five cases positive for
p63
. Smooth-muscle actin was focal and discontinuous in only two cases, which were also discontinuous for
p63
. The DCIS negative for
p63
was also negative for 1A4. In conclusion, our results confirm the data of literature that
p63
is a specific marker of myoepithelial cells in breast tissue. However,
p63
is not as sensitive as 1A4 in staining myoepithelial cells and lack of
p63
expression cannot be used as a reliable marker of invasiveness in ductal carcinoma in situ of the breast.
...
PMID:Is p63 reliable in detecting microinvasion in ductal carcinoma in situ of the breast? 1270 42
We studied the usefulness of
p63
and thyroid transcription factor-1 (TTF-1) immunostains for differentiating poorly differentiated squamous cell carcinoma (PDSCC) from small cell lung carcinoma (SCLC). We used monoclonal antibodies reactive to
p63
or TTF-1 to stain 4-microns-thick sections from 30 formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded lung biopsy and resection specimens and 7 alcohol-fixed, formalin-postfixed, paraffin-embedded cell blocks from lung fine-needle aspirations (FNAs). For
p63
, we used a streptavidin-biotin kit, diaminobenzidine as the chromogen, and a hematoxylin counterstain. We used automated immunostaining for TTF-1. The 37 cases included 23 SCLCs, 13 PDSCCs, and 1
carcinoma
initially diagnosed as PDSCC. All 23 SCLCs were negative or, rarely, equivocal for
p63
; 20 (87%) of 23 were TTF-1+; nuclear staining ranged from strong and/or frequent to weak and/or uncommon. All 13 PDSCCs were TTF-1-/p63+ with intense staining of 50% to 100% of tumor cells. One case originally diagnosed as PDSCC was TTF-1+/
p63
-, suggestive of SCLC; after morphologic reexamination and immunostaining for neuroendocrine markers, it was reclassified as intermediate-type SCLC. TTF-1 immunostaining showed equal or increased sensitivity in alcohol-fixed cytologic cell block samples compared with formalin-fixed biopsy material; in 1 SCLC case, the biopsy specimen was TTF-1-; however, the FNA cell block stained positively.
p63
and TTF-1 appear to be useful for differentiating SCLC from lung PDSCC in formalin-fixed and alcohol-fixed, formalin-postfixed material.
...
PMID:p63 and TTF-1 immunostaining. A useful marker panel for distinguishing small cell carcinoma of lung from poorly differentiated squamous cell carcinoma of lung. 1276 Feb 80
Basal cell proliferation is a common finding in a benign hyperplastic prostate gland. Occasionally, basal cell hyperplasia is so florid that it can be mistaken for prostatic adenocarcinoma. We characterized histological, ultrastructural, and immunohistochemical features of florid basal cell hyperplasia from transurethral resections (n = 11) and prostatectomy specimens (n = 4). Fifteen cases of prostatic adenocarcinoma were used as comparison. Intraluminal calcification was present in 40% of florid basal cell hyperplasia cases (6 of 15) and a unique finding of intracytoplasmic hyaline globules was detected in 53.3% of florid basal cell hyperplasia cases (8 of 15). Ultrastructural analysis revealed luminal calcification and intracytoplasmic electron-dense globules in foci of basal cell hyperplasia. Crystalloids, a frequent finding in low-grade prostate cancer, were absent in all 15 cases of florid basal cell hyperplasia. By immunohistochemistry, the basal cell-specific 34betaE12 and
p63
as well as glutathione-s-transferase pi were positive in all basal cell hyperplasia cases but negative in all prostatic adenocarcinomas. These distinguishing features of florid basal cell hyperplasia are helpful in differential diagnosis from prostatic adenocarcinoma. Cytokeratins 8 and 18 were both positive in basal cells, benign secretory cells, and
carcinoma
cells, failing to be of discrimatory value. Immunostaining for alpha-methylacyl-coenzyme racemase, a new prostate cancer marker, was negative in hyperplastic basal cells but detected a distinct minor benign cell population in basal cell hyperplasia of possible neuroendocrine origin.
...
PMID:Florid basal cell hyperplasia of the prostate: a histological, ultrastructural, and immunohistochemical analysis. 1279 20
Pure sebaceous neoplasms arising in dermoid cysts of the ovary are exceedingly rare. A 63-year-old female with abdominal swelling and pain underwent a right salpingo-oophorectomy that showed a unilocular cyst weighing 830 g and measuring 15x12x10 cm, filled with sebaceous material containing a few hair shafts. The cyst wall exhibited plaques protruding into the cavity of the cyst. Microscopy revealed a dermoid cyst with nests and lobules of atypical and infiltrating sebaceous cells surrounded by basaloid cells. The tumor cells stained diffusely for high-molecular-weight cytokeratins and focally for cytokeratin 7, cytokeratin 19, epithelial membrane antigen and carcinoembryonic antigen in the immunohistochemistry study. Low-molecular-weight cytokeratins, cytokeratin 20, vimentin, S100,
p63
, estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, p53 and c-erbB-2 were negative in tumoral cells. The proliferative labeling index (Ki67 and proliferating cell nuclear antigen) was low. Basal cell carcinoma with sebaceous differentiation and sebaceoma must be considered in the differential diagnosis. However, the presence of obvious malignant sebaceous differentiation in nearly every tumor nest and lack of peripheral palisading and peri-tumoral myxoid stroma excluded these diagnoses. Some histogenetic concepts relevant to this case are discussed along with a brief review of this neoplasm. To our knowledge, this is the sixth case report of a sebaceous
carcinoma
arising in a mature cystic teratoma of the ovary.
...
PMID:Clinicopathological and immunohistochemical features of a sebaceous carcinoma arising within a benign dermoid cyst of the ovary. 1283 22
P63 is essential for the differentiation of normal urothelium and is also expressed in transitional cell carcinoma (TCC) of the bladder. We investigated
p63
immunoreactivity in upper urinary tract TCC (n=53) and in renal-cell
carcinoma
(RCC; n=188) using a tissue microarray technique. P63 expression was detected in 51/53 (96.2%) TCCs, showing decreased expression in high-stage (pT1 and pT2 100%; pT3 90.9%) and poorly differentiated (G1 and G2 100%; G3 92%) tumors. All RCCs were negative for
p63
. P63 proved to be a helpful tool, even in poorly differentiated and undifferentiated renal malignancies, to distinguish TCC from RCC.
...
PMID:P63 immunoreactivity distinguishes upper urinary tract transitional-cell carcinoma and renal-cell carcinoma even in poorly differentiated tumors. 1287 91
The nested variant of urothelial
carcinoma
is a recently described bladder tumor entity with a rare incidence. Two cases of this disease are presented in this report; the patients in both cases were elderly men, with a predominant involvement of the trigone region. Histologically, the tumor cells were arranged in ill-defined nests and had low-grade nuclear features. Both cases had a diffusely infiltrating growth pattern with widespread local disease at cystectomy. Strong immunohistochemical staining for
p63
in the neoplastic cells supports the urothelial cell nature of this neoplasm. High p53 and Ki-67 indices of this tumor correlate with the aggressiveness of this subtype.
...
PMID:The nested variant of urothelial carcinoma: clinicopathology of 2 cases. 1287 96
Myoepitheliomas and mixed tumors were only recently recognized to occur primarily in soft tissue, and only small case numbers have been described. To characterize these tumors further and to evaluate prognostic parameters, 101 myoepithelial tumors of soft tissue were retrieved from the authors' consult files. Hematoxylin and eosin sections were reexamined, immunohistochemistry was performed, and clinical details were obtained from referring physicians. Fifty-three patients were male and 48 female (mean age 38 years; range 3-83 years). Tumor size ranged from 0.7 to 20 cm (mean 4.7 cm). Most tumors arose in the extremities and limb girdles: 41 in the lower limbs, 35 in the upper limbs, 15 in the head and neck, and 10 in the trunk. Fifty-four tumors were situated in subcutis and 37 in deep soft tissue (depth unstated in 10). Most cases were grossly well circumscribed; 43 showed microscopically infiltrative margins. Histologically, most tumors were lobulated, composed of cords or nests of epithelioid, ovoid, or spindled cells with a variably reticular architecture and a chondromyxoid or collagenous/hyalinized stroma. Eight cases showed a predominantly solid proliferation of spindled or plasmacytoid cells; 17 demonstrated ductular differentiation (mixed tumors). Cartilage was present in 6 cases, 6 contained bone, and 4 others contained both. Mitoses ranged from 0 to 68 per 10 high power fields (mean 4.7 per 10 high power fields). Tumors with benign cytomorphology or mild cytologic atypia (low-grade) were classified as myoepithelioma or mixed tumor, whereas tumors with moderate to severe atypia (high-grade) were classified as myoepithelial
carcinoma
(epithelioid or spindled cells with vesicular or coarse chromatin, prominent, often large nucleoli, or nuclear pleomorphism) or malignant mixed tumor (cytologically malignant cartilage or bone). Sixty-one cases were myoepitheliomas or mixed tumors, and 40 were myoepithelial carcinomas or malignant mixed tumors. By immunohistochemistry, all cases with available material were reactive for epithelial markers (keratins and/or epithelial membrane antigen): 90 of 97 (93%) expressed keratins (most often AE1/AE3 or PAN-K), 84 of 97 (87%) S-100 protein, 44 of 51 (86%) calponin, 52 of 83 (63%) epithelial membrane antigen, 40 of 87 (46%) glial fibrillary acidic protein, 27 of 75 (36%) smooth muscle actin, 15 of 66 (23%)
p63
, and 7 of 51 (14%) desmin. Follow-up was available for 64 patients. Among 33 cases with benign or low-grade cytology (mean follow-up 36 months; range 4-168 months), 6 recurred locally (18%) and none metastasized. No clinical or histologic features correlated with recurrence. Among 31 cytologically malignant cases (mean follow-up 50 months; range 4-252 months), 13 recurred locally (42%) and 10 metastasized (32%); so far, 4 patients have died of metastatic tumor. This study expands the spectrum of myoepithelial tumors of soft tissue to include myoepithelial carcinomas and malignant mixed tumors, which pursue an aggressive clinical course. Although the majority of morphologically benign or low-grade myoepithelial neoplasms of soft tissue behave in a benign fashion, there is an approximate 20% risk for local recurrence.
...
PMID:Myoepithelial tumors of soft tissue: a clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical study of 101 cases with evaluation of prognostic parameters. 1296 Aug 2
Abnormalities in the p53 gene are regarded as the most consistent of the genetic abnormalities in oral squamous-cell
carcinoma
. Two new members of the p53 gene family, p73 and
p63
, have recently been identified, with the three sharing considerable sequence homology at the acidic N-terminal transactivation, central DNA-binding and C-terminal oligomerization domains, indicating possible functional and biological interactions. The differential expression of p73,
p63
and p53 genes in human oral squamous-cell
carcinoma
does not yet appear to be completely understood, however. In this study, therefore, immunohistochemical analysis of protein expression was performed for 40 samples of well-differentiated human buccal squamous-cell carcinomas, with 10 specimens of normal buccal mucosa employed as controls. Differential expressions of
p63
, p73 and p53 proteins in the
carcinoma
samples were: p63+/p73+/p53 + (n = 28; 70%); p63+/p73+/p53- (n = 4; 10%); p63+/p73-/p53- (n = 8; 20%), respectively; and p63+/p73+/p53- for normal mucosa (n = 10; 100%). A significant correlation between p53,
p63
and p73 immunoexpression was demonstrated for the buccal squamous-cell
carcinoma
samples (P < 0.0001; Fisher's exact test). Significance was not achieved for the correlation between p73 and p53 immunoexpression and clinicopathological parameters for buccal carcinomas (P > 0.05; Fisher's exact test). Our results indicate that both p73 and
p63
may be involved in the development of human buccal squamous-cell
carcinoma
, perhaps in concert with p53.
...
PMID:Differential expression of p53, p63 and p73 proteins in human buccal squamous-cell carcinomas. 1296 50
p63
proteins are p53 homologs that are postulated to regulate squamous stem cell commitment. An immunohistochemical survey of
p63
expression in normal thyroid and in reactive, neoplastic, and inflammatory thyroid disorders was performed. Sections from routinely fixed and processed archival thyroidectomy specimens were pretreated with citric acid, pH 6.0, for antigen retrieval, then incubated overnight with anti-
p63
monoclonal antibody 4A4. Slides were stained using a streptavidin-biotin kit and diaminobenzidine as a chromagen, and then were counterstained with hematoxylin. The results showed that
p63
expression was negative in normal thyroid tissue, nodular goiters, and oncocytic follicular adenomas. Positivity was rare and weak in follicular adenomas.
p63
-positive foci were commonly found in Hashimoto's thyroiditis (1 or more foci in 78.8% of cases), but rare in Graves' disease. Twenty-seven of 33 papillary thyroid carcinomas (81.8%) displayed
p63
-positive foci. Staining was uncommon in follicular carcinomas and rare in medullary carcinomas. One case of insular
carcinoma
was
p63
-positive. All squamoid structures were
p63
-positive;
p63
-positive structures morphologically consistent with solid cell nests were also identified. Based on the results of this study, we conclude that
p63
is commonly expressed in papillary thyroid
carcinoma
and in Hashimoto's thyroiditis. Given the debated association of papillary thyroid
carcinoma
with Hashimoto's thyroiditis, it is possible that
p63
expression may be a potential pathobiologic link between the two disorders. The finding of
p63
in benign squamoid nests supports a possible interrelationship between these structures and both Hashimoto's thyroiditis and papillary
carcinoma
. The high percentage of papillary carcinomas with
p63
-positive foci appears to distinguish papillary
carcinoma
from other neoplasms originating in the thyroid.
...
PMID:Expression of p63 in papillary thyroid carcinoma and in Hashimoto's thyroiditis: a pathobiologic link? 1450 36
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>